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Layered Design for Ruby on Rails Applications

Layered Design for Ruby on Rails Applications

By : Vladimir Dementyev
4.7 (16)
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Layered Design for Ruby on Rails Applications

Layered Design for Ruby on Rails Applications

4.7 (16)
By: Vladimir Dementyev

Overview of this book

The Ruby on Rails framework boosts productivity by leveraging the convention-over-configuration principle and model-view-controller (MVC) pattern, enabling developers to build features efficiently. This initial simplicity often leads to complexity, making a well-structured codebase difficult to maintain. Written by a seasoned software engineer and award-winning contributor to many other open-source projects, including Ruby on Rails and Ruby, this book will help you keep your code maintainable while working on a Rails app. You’ll get to grips with the framework’s capabilities and principles to harness the full potential of Rails, and tackle many common design problems by discovering useful patterns and abstraction layers. By implementing abstraction and dividing the application into manageable modules, you’ll be able to concentrate on specific parts of the app development without getting overwhelmed by the entire codebase. This also encourages code reuse, simplifying the process of adding new features and enhancing the application's capabilities. Additionally, you’ll explore further steps in scaling Rails codebase, such as service extractions. By the end of this book, you’ll become a code design specialist with a deep understanding of the Rails framework principles.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Exploring Rails and Its Abstractions
7
Part 2: Extracting Layers from Models
11
Part 3: Essential Layers for Rails Applications
17
Index
18
Gems and Patterns

Adapters and wrappers at your service

Ruby on Rails is a universal web framework, and the usage of adapters and plugins could be easily justified. But do we need the same level of flexibility and extensibility in applications built with Rails? The answer is, as always, it depends. So let me share some particular use cases when using separation patterns is especially helpful.

Modern applications are not isolated pieces of software. Usually, we rely on dozens of third-party services to outsource some functionality. For example, we send emails and other notifications, perform data analysis, collect analytics, and so on. In most cases, there are a variety of third-party providers to choose from.

We can start injecting the provider directly into our application code without using any pattern. Let’s consider, for example, adding a URL-shortening feature.

Assuming we chose bit.ly and the corresponding gem (https://github.com/philnash/bitly) as the implementation, we might...

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