This is my tumblelog. It's much more simplistic than a blog, it's just random snippets of things really. Some I've created, many I haven't.

Posts Tagged: programming

Write Better Cukes With the Rel Attribute - Literate Programming

Using Vim as a Complete Ruby on Rails IDE

I’ve switched over to using MacVIM about 6 months ago and I’m loving it. The only thing I miss from TextMate is the shortcut to create an HTML tag, then type what that tag is. I’m probably switching to HAML soon so that point might be moot.

Basic Patterns for Everyday Programming

Why ruby? part one – a classy class system

This just reiterates why I really like Ruby

MongoDB Aggregation III: Map-Reduce Basics

The best explanation of map-reduce I’ve read to date

TDD On The Bleeding Edge With Ruby 1.9.3, Rails 3, RSpec, Cucumber, Autotest, and Factory Girl

Source: dzone.com

CLOSED-LOOP: BDD Antipattern: Business readable but no business involved

Source: blog.jonasbandi.net

How to become successful Rubyist — Dmitry Belitsky blog. Web development, freelance, happy life.

Source: belitsky.info

18 must-bookmark cheatsheets for webdevelopers

The design patterns cheat sheet is pretty good.

Source: webdeveloperjuice.com

tumbler-glass - Project Hosting on Google Code

The market is already a little saturated, but this looks promising.

Source: code.google.com

Selenium and JBehave Continuous Testing using Page Objects

I have to give this a read, though I would like to use Cucumber instead.

Source: dzone.com

Best Tech Interview Question I've Seen

Oh, fun!

Source: java.dzone.com

What I wish a Ruby programmer had told me one year ago..

Source: blog.sirupsen.dk

Writing Testable Code

A very comprehensive post, but the formatting could use some work. Maybe I’ll reformat it and repost it with a link to the original author.

Source: methodsandtools.com

Favorite Ruby and Rails Podcasts

My home/side projects come and go in swells, and they’re back now. Since rails is my weapon of choice, it’s always nice to see what’s changed since I’ve been gone. Beginner podcats help do the trick.

Source: thinkinginrails.com