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From PHP to Ruby on Rails

You're reading from  From PHP to Ruby on Rails

Product type Book
Published in Dec 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804610091
Pages 244 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Bernard Pineda Bernard Pineda
Profile icon Bernard Pineda
Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters close

Preface 1. Part 1:From PHP to Ruby Basics
2. Chapter 1: Understanding the Ruby Mindset and Culture 3. Chapter 2: Setting Up Our Local Environment 4. Chapter 3: Comparing Basic Ruby Syntax to PHP 5. Chapter 4: Ruby Scripting versus PHP Scripting 6. Chapter 5: Libraries and Class Syntax 7. Chapter 6: Debugging Ruby 8. Part 2:Ruby and the Web
9. Chapter 7: Understanding Convention over Configuration 10. Chapter 8: Models, DBs, and Active Record 11. Chapter 9: Bringing It All Together 12. Chapter 10: Considerations for Hosting Rails Applications versus PHP Applications 13. Index 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

MVC at its finest

As mentioned previously, Rails is an MVC controller. If you’ve used PHP frameworks in the past, such as CodeIgniter, Symfony, or Laravel, you will probably be familiar with the term. If you’re not, I recommend checking out these pages:

  • https://www.oracle.com/technical-resources/articles/java/java-se-app-design-with-mvc.html
  • https://pusher.com/blog/laravel-mvc-use/#why-use-mvc

In summary, the MVC pattern divides our application into three components – the model, in which we save all of our business logic (mostly but not exclusively by connecting to a database), the view, in which we hold what is to be shown on the browser (HTML for the most part), and the controller, which serves as the organizer of the previous two. If we were to use an example to explain this, a user authentication component would function as follows: the HTML form that shows the user and password fields would be created on the view. Once the user clicks on...

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