I live about 30 minutes away. We've had a lot of earthquakes the past few days. This should shut them up :) Some scientists say we've entered a period of very frequent volcanic activity for the next 100 years or so in this area.
Great tip!! Thanks!
Rails 7 introduced a lot of new things, but honestly, the `bin/dev` script is the thing I notice the most. I want to try to give your some insight into how `bin/dev` and `Procfile.dev` work together...
That's hilarious! I'm actually impressed it lasted for 22 million commits, I would have thought the breaking point would be earlier.
It really does feel like the old web again to a certain extent. I hope this "age of enshittification" leads to a throwback to the old web but I'm not convinced it will happen. I feel like Lemmy (and other federation platforms) are definitely our best shot at it :)
Anyway, happy to be here :)
Makes your background jobs interruptible and resumable by design. - GitHub - Shopify/job-iteration: Makes your background jobs interruptible and resumable by design.
Meet Iteration, an extension for ActiveJob that makes your jobs interruptible and resumable, saving all progress that the job has made (aka checkpoint for jobs).
Build reactive applications with the Rails tooling you already know and love.
Build reactive applications with the Rails tooling you already know and love
A collection of talks of Ruby conferences around the world, built using Rails 7.1, Hotwire and Kamal
Haha true :D Thanks /u/Ategon, for all your hard work, it's really appreciated. The server looks awesome!
Monitor performance of you Rails applications (self-hosted and free) - GitHub - igorkasyanchuk/rails_performance: Monitor performance of you Rails applications (self-hosted and free)
A self-hosted tool to monitor the performance of your Ruby on Rails application.
This is a simple and free alternative to the New Relic APM, Datadog or other similar services.
The example is Ruby specific but I think the general thought applies to most projects and environments as well
Happy Sunday fellow Rubyists! The Ruby Kaigi 2023 videos have been released on their YouTube channel. We've got a couple videos in this issue and you can get to the full playlist from either. Enjoy!
YouTube Video
Click to view this content.
Text based version: https://world.hey.com/this.week.in.rails/this-week-in-rails-june-9-2023-2e77d3dc
Mozilla is working on a new usability feature in its open source Firefox web browser that can automate interactions with so-called Cookie banners on websites.
No more cookie banners for Firefox users?
Can someone post an example of what this actually does? Haven't seen this before and I can't seem to easily see an example of what effect this has on your scripts. I'm guessing by reading some links that it outputs all commands that a script ran? Is that right?
Ruby SHell. Contribute to isene/rsh development by creating an account on GitHub.
Interesting, a shell made with Ruby. Author posted a screencast here. Not sure how practical it is but an interesting project for Ruby
It’s been a fantastic year for WebKit.
I know Safari/Webkit gets a bad rap usually but I thought this list was pretty neat! I actually use Safari as my main browser when developing :)
Most Rails apps probably don't need a React or Vue frontend. With a few lines of Rails and Hotwire magic, we can build a live frontend. That's what we're going to be doing today...
A good resource for anyone that wants to learn Hotwire :)
I figured I'd also create a welcome post :) So, welcome!
I hope we can create a welcoming environment here for all and as always, MINASWAN :)
5 tips for new Rails developers to be more productive and confident.