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why the lucky stiff

Author of Why's (Poignant) Guide to Ruby

3+ Works 62 Members 3 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the name: _why the lucky stiff

Image credit: why the lucky stiff at RailsConf Europe 2006 in London

Works by why the lucky stiff

Why's (Poignant) Guide to Ruby (2011) 57 copies, 3 reviews
Closure (2013) 3 copies
nobody knows shoes (2007) 2 copies

Associated Works

The Ruby Programming Language (2008) — Illustrator, some editions — 332 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Gillette, Jonathan
Other names
_why
Gender
male
Occupations
freelance professor

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
For perhaps the first time, computer science instruction and /literature/ fuse into one perfect specimen.

Whenever I feel down and out about my profession, I come back to this book to remember that there are people who may one day actually overcome this supposed split between the humanities and the technologies that modern society seems to function under. This is the first positive answer to the question of whether computer science can be adapted (without appropriation) into works of show more art.

Beyond that, this is actually a pretty excellent Ruby tutorial. As an experienced programmer, I may be banking on previously earned knowledge which means I cannot necessarily speak for a total newcomer.

However, you'll spend half an hour reading up on some seemingly nonsensical tale of Dr. Charn or Why's daughter's organ teacher or what have you, only to find that underneath the whim you have been shown exactly the principles that you will then take ten minutes internalizing in Ruby code.

The only knock is that sometimes the whimsy runs on a bit thick and doesn't hold well enough to be more than charmingly bloated words of wonder. At those moments you may either wish for another code example or perhaps just for the foxes to get on with their tale instead of wallowing in existential despair.
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Poigant means that something is s so beautiful that tears shed from eyes. In
this case, the author says that Ruby code is so beautiful that tears will shed
from your eyes when you read it.

Yukihiro Matsumoto created Ruby in 1993 but I came to know about in the context
of a web development framework called Rails. This book, thankfully does not
teach you rails, but instead teaches you the Ruby Language, which in my opinion
is a greater aim to have.

Author cheerfully says that "Ruby" is the computer's show more language and we are the
translators for the world. Also goes about explaining the concepts in more
non-programmer approachable manner like "If variables and constants are nouns
then methods are verbs".
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Statistics

Works
3
Also by
1
Members
62
Popularity
#271,093
Rating
4.0
Reviews
3
ISBNs
5
Favorited
1

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