Posted on March 6, 2010, 12:13 pm, by David, under
L33t Links.
Running a website costs money which is why I’ve added some slots for Google AdSense ads on this blog and in its feed, namely at the bottom of every blog post, near the top of the sidebar on every page, and at the bottom of each feed item. They’re fairly small and colored similarly to the rest of the blog to make them as discrete as possible. Thanks for your understanding!
- Tilt, “Generic interface to multiple Ruby template engines”
- Frank, “Frank lets you build static sites using your favorite libs, painlessly”
- Rails 3: Let ActiveRecord Manage Your Translations
- Testing Facebook
- Jasmine for JavaScript Testing: It’s Screw.Unit++
- Put your mailer where the action is!, no, by “action” he does not necessarily mean controller action
- Ambitious Query Indexer, “Pain-free indexing to speed up your Rails app”
- Rapid prototyping with HAML, SASS and Ruby
- BlueGreenDeployment, clever
- Getting Real about NoSQL and the SQL-Isn’t-Scalable Lie
- validates_timeliness, “Date and time validation plugin for Rails 2.x and allows custom date/time formats”
- Breakneck, simple gem for serving static files on your development machine
- Performance Tuning for Phusion Passenger
- A quick RVM rundown
- 47 Amazing CSS3 Animation Demos
- SEOChecker, “check your website if it is seo”
- Jasmine, “DOM-less simple JavaScript testing framework” from Pivotal Labs
- The Ruby Standard Wiki, online version of the Ruby ISO standard draft
- #gemsday, “Share your favorite new RubyGems weekly”
- Rubex, “A simple copy cat of Rubular” – the real version has supposedly been acting up lately
- Write Fewer Regular Expressions, yay
- lambda { foo }.should run_in(1.second), useful RSpec matcher from Ryan Bigg
Tags:
activerecord,
bdd,
css,
css3,
database,
deployment,
email,
haml,
internationalization,
javascript,
nosql,
performance,
plugin,
rails,
rails3,
rspec,
ruby,
rubygems,
rvm,
sass,
scalability,
server,
sql,
tdd,
testing,
webdesign,
webdevelopment,
webserver No Comments |
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Posted on January 20, 2010, 7:45 am, by David, under
L33t Links.
The blog posts that link to one of or both of my BugMash articles:
These and the people that shared my articles on Twitter has generated a lot of traffic on my blog an won me a few more subscribers as well. Thanks!
Tags:
activerecord,
css,
database,
debugging,
git,
github,
javascript,
performance,
rails,
rails3,
ruby,
scalability,
sql,
webdesign No Comments |
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Posted on January 6, 2010, 8:29 am, by David, under
L33t Links.
Do you think there’s enough links?
- NetRecorder, “Record network responses for easy stubbing of external calls”
- MailStyle, converts your HTML emails to use inline CSS instead of an external stylesheet
- Rackamole, “a rack application that traps user’s interactions with your web site”
- Faster, better, cheaper! TDD wins in a simple experiment
- NoSql Databases – Landscape, an overview of all the alternatives to SQL-based databases out there
- Reincarnation, making a Ruby class inherit from itself
- Cromwell, “allows you to easily protect your scripts from being killed”
- Rubinius 1.0.0-RC2 Released
- The Maximal Usage Doctrine for Open Source
- SCSS, CSS-style syntax for Sass (branch of the Sass project)
- Steve Krug on the least you can do about usability, a recorded presentation
- Cappuccino Web Framework, makes it easy to build desktop-caliber applications that run in a web browser
- Bonus: An SD Ruby episode on the above
- Admin Noob, “System Administration for Noobs”
- Waging War on Whitespace (using TextMate), I wish this could work in Gedit
Tags:
css,
email,
html,
nosql,
open-source,
rack,
rails,
ruby,
sass,
security,
sql,
sysadmin,
tdd,
testing,
text-editor,
webdevelopment No Comments |
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Posted on December 8, 2009, 8:12 am, by David, under
L33t Links.
Posted on November 15, 2009, 2:07 pm, by David, under
L33t Links.