Summary:
Ruby is an increasingly popular, fully
object-oriented dynamic programming language, hailed by many
practitioners as the finest and most useful language available
today. When Ruby first burst onto the scene in the Western
world, the Pragmatic Programmers were there with the definitive
reference manual, Programming Ruby: The Pragmatic Programmer's
Guide. Now in its second edition, author Dave Thomas has
expanded the famous Pickaxe book with over 200 pages of new
content, covering all the improved language features of Ruby
1.8 and standard library modules. The Pickaxe contains four
major sections: An acclaimed tutorial on using Ruby. The
definitive reference to the language. Complete documentation on
all built-in classes, modules, and methods Complete
descriptions of all 98 standard libraries. If you enjoyed the
First Edition, you'll appreciate the expanded content,
including enhanced coverage of installation, packaging,
documenting Ruby source code, threading and synchronization,
and enhancing Ruby's capabilities using C-language extensions.
Programming for the World Wide Web is easy in Ruby, with new
chapters on XML/RPC, SOAP, distributed Ruby, templating
systems, and other web services. There's even a new chapter on
unit testing. This is the definitive reference manual for Ruby,
including a description of all the standard library modules, a
complete reference to all built-in classes and modules
(including more than 250 significant changes since the First
Edition). Coverage of other features has grown tremendously,
including details on how to harness the sophisticated
capabilities of irb, so you can dynamically examine and
experiment with your running code. "Ruby is a wonderfully
powerful and useful language, and whenever I'm working with it
this book is at my side" --Martin Fowler, Chief Scientist,
ThoughtWorks