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Crystal Programming

Crystal Programming

By : George Dietrich, Bernal
5 (1)
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Crystal Programming

Crystal Programming

5 (1)
By: George Dietrich, Bernal

Overview of this book

Crystal is a programming language with a concise and user-friendly syntax, along with a seamless system and a performant core, reaching C-like speed. This book will help you gain a deep understanding of the fundamental concepts of Crystal and show you how to apply them to create various types of applications. This book comes packed with step-by-step explanations of essential concepts and practical examples. You'll learn how to use Crystal’s features to create complex and organized projects relying on OOP and its most common design patterns. As you progress, you'll gain a solid understanding of both the basic and advanced features of Crystal. This will enable you to build any application, including command-line interface (CLI) programs and web applications using IOs, concurrency and C bindings, HTTP servers, and the JSON API. By the end of this programming book, you’ll be equipped with the skills you need to use Crystal programming for building and understanding any application you come across.
Table of Contents (26 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Getting Started
5
Part 2: Learning by Doing – CLI
10
Part 3: Learn by Doing – Web Application
13
Part 4: Metaprogramming
18
Part 5: Supporting Tools

Getting started with Athena

Similar to what we did when creating our CLI application in Chapter 4, Exploring Crystal via Writing a Command-Line Interface, we are going to make use of the crystal init command to scaffold our application. However, unlike last time, where we scaffolded out a library, we are going to initialize an app. The main reason for this is so that we also get a shard.lock file to allow for reproducible installs, as we learned in the previous chapter. The full command would end up looking like crystal init app blog.

Now that we have our application scaffolded, we can go ahead and add Athena as a dependency by adding the following to the shard.yml file, being sure to run shards install afterward as well:

dependencies:
  athena:
    github: athena-framework/framework
    version: ~> 0.16.0

And that is all there is to installing Athena. It is designed to be non-intrusive by not requiring any external dependencies...

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