Ruby and Ruby On Rails books and tutorials are legion, but they are not always up to date nor complete. I did a lot of digging and reading to find the best ones and ranked them in order from standard to advanced material.
If you're eyeing Ruby on Rails and looking for a learning path to follow, this post is for you.
None of the links here are sponsored in any way. Not that I don't want to have sponsored links, I just don't know how to generate them.
๐ค Let's go.
Day one, morning: TryRuby
๐ https://ruby.github.io/TryRuby/
This is a ~30 minutes interactive tutorial. It will get you trained on the essential Ruby data structures. I really enjoyed it. If you have experience in other programming languages this will be faster to follow.
Day one, afternoon: The official Getting Started from the Rails website
๐ https://guides.rubyonrails.org/getting_started.html
It's a simple tutorial, but it can be a good way to endup your first day of learning Ruby and Rails.
Rest of the week Next two weeks: Learn Enough's Ruby on Rails tutorial
๐ https://www.learnenough.com/ruby-on-rails-6th-edition
This must be, by far, one of the oldest non-official Ruby on Rails tutorial (2010). Since it's a paying one, I was hesitant (you know, ๐ stuff!) but you should not. Its content is of amazing quality. It's not just a copy and paste tutorial, you really do learn a lot of fine details of Ruby and Ruby on Rails.
Highly recommended.
Update November 29, 2019: It took me longer than a week to finish this tutorial, but it was worth it, here's the final result:
โ Stop learning and build
At this point, you can stop learning intensively and actually build stuff.
But in the future, you might want to learn more, to scale, to optimize, to refactor. When that's the case, I plan on reading:
- The Ruby Style Guide
- The Rails Style Guide
- Build a SaaS App in Ruby on Rails 6
- The Complete Guide To Rails Performance when you're ready/need to get web-scaleยฎ
- The Well-Grounded Rubyist, Third Edition when you need and you're ready to dive deeper into Ruby
- Agile Web Development with Rails 6 when you need and you're ready to dive deeper into Rails
- Awesome Ruby
- Awesome Rails
- Secure Rails
- Securing Sensitive Data In Rails
- Production Rails
- The Rails 6 way
- Hix on Rails's tutorials
Any other recommendation? Add them in the comments. ๐
Thanks for reading, if you enjoyed this post, share it for others to discover it:
Vincent Voyer@vvoyer๐ Modern resources for learning Rails 6 and Ruby, 2019 edition: dev.to/vvo/modern-resโฆ22:12 PM - 19 Nov 2019
Photo by Robert Bye on Unsplash
Top comments (9)
I'd recommend spending a lot of time with Ruby itself before adding Rails to the picture. Ruby is a super-powerful language, almost like C++ when it comes to the number of language features you have available to solve any particular problem (which can be a good thing and a bad thing).
I tried learning Rails before without a concrete understanding of Ruby, and I succeeded in making a site, but my code wasn't elegant and nothing I learned soaked in because I was constantly having to go look things up and didn't understand Ruby enough for them to click in my head. I've been learning Ruby the past few months without even touching Rails and I've I still feel like I've only scratched the surface!
Thanks Scott! I guess experience differs for me here, using TryRuby and the Learn Enough Rails tutorial was sufficient for me to get enough Ruby to feel comfortable. I come from the JavaScript world also and actually the different language features and concept are similar, even if syntax differs.
I would maybe avoid spending months learning Ruby if your goal is to build a product, because it seems a very long time. But it depends on your needs.
Still, super important to learn Ruby first and then continue learning it yes.
Yeah, always learn ruby first. You'll enjoy rails more when you know how to write ruby.
Hey Vincent ! Are you switching to ruby from the Js wonnderland :) ?
Btw nice ressources here, i would add:
gorails.com a well done screencasts and a lot of interesting free contents
driftingRuby
And of course reading the actual source code of some famous osc gems, just open the gemfile, pick a gem and try to understand how it works
Thanks Chakib! I am still a JavaScript fan but for backends I am giving a try at Rails yep :)
That's actually a good list! I would also add:
Ruby on Rails 6: Learn 25+ gems and build a Startup MVP 2020
Ruby on Rails 6: Learn to Build a Multitenancy Subscriptions SaaS app MVP [2020]
Hey Vincent!
That's a nice collection here, I didn't know Ankane's Secure Rails - good stuff!
We've recently started our series focusing solely on Ruby on Rails configuration tutorials.
I'd appreciate any feedback, and keep up the good work!
Thanks for the comment! I went through the tutorials, very well written and with lots of content, congrats!
I'll add your resource to the list, it's relevant.
Neat!