Rather than roll my own URL regexes, I prefer to let the existing libraries do the heavy lifting. Ruby has a uri library which is fantastic for parsing (and validating) URLs. For example, something like this might be used in a model validation: I noticed a bit ago that I started getting invalid URL errors [...]
In tracking down a memory leak in one of our Rails apps today, I ran across an interesting post detailing the difference between anonymous and named blocks in Ruby, and the performance differences therein. It’s definitely worth a look, especially if you’re running in a complex environment, where new closures will be large and unwieldy. [...]
I recently ran across a rather bare post espousing some generic “optimization” techniques for Rails apps. It offered no education, no explanation, no benchmarks. So, I thought, why not put those claims to the test?
attachment_fu is fantastic, but it’s a bit limited for some purposes. Ever wanted to upload data from a URL instead of making people upload files? It’s a common problem! Presume that we have a model named Image, which is our target for attachment_fu. Adding URL upload capability is surprisingly simple: There you go. All you [...]
Ever wanted to do IM from Rails? xmpp4r-simple makes it really easy to talk to Jabber clients (such as Google Talk users) from Ruby, but it’s not quite a cut-and-dried solution for your Rails apps. Fortunately, there’s Jabberish. Jabberish is a DRb-backed Jabber client designed for use in multi-server Rails apps. Just drop in the [...]
site_config is a little plugin that addresses a problem lots of people seem to need to solve in their Rails apps: per-environment configuration variables. It’s very simple, but makes configuration dead-easy. To install it: script/plugin install git://github.com/cheald/site_config.git Once you have it installed, check out config/site_config.yml – there’s your config file. You’ll notice that it has [...]