6 Results for Programming

Are More Programmers Using Ruby or Just Window-Shopping?

Ruby logoSince acquiring the Koders.com code search engine earlier this year, Black Duck Software has added more than 200 million lines of code to the Koders.com search repository. Black Duck says that an analysis of search requests reveals, Ruby is now the fourth most requested language on Koders.com, after Java, C/C++ and C#. That's interesting information, to be sure, but what does it mean?



PHP "Test Fests" Scheduled for This Month

PHP is not the sexiest language, and many people are quick to point out its deficiencies for Web application development. However, PHP is one of the most popular open-source projects, with a huge following, and many installations. Given that it is a relatively stable project, you might expect the PHP development team to be resting on its laurels. But no; in addition to a regular bug-fix release, the PHP QA team is sponsoring a test fest, in an attempt to improve the language's automated test suite.



Book Review: The Rails Way

Want a complete, printed reference for Rails that dedicates a separate chapter to each topic? Look no further than The Rails Way, a new book by Obie Fernandez.

Ruby on Rails is one of the best-known open-source Web frameworks currently in use. It combines the Ruby language with an MVC (model-view-controller) architecture, a powerful object-relational mapper known as ActiveRecord.

 



Libraries Remove the Madness from JavaScript

Want to create modern Web applications? You'll need to use JavaScript. But don't write the JavaScript yourself; use one of the high-quality open-source libraries that let you concentrate on your coding, rather than browser incompatibilities.

Back in 1995, while I was working for Time Warner's Web division, someone showed me the latest technology advance to come out of Netscape, then the hottest company. It was a language called LiveScript, and it was a programming language that worked within the browser.


R: A (Statistically) Significant Language

If you work with statistics, then you should look at R, an open-source language for statistical analysis. It's jam-packed with features, and has a strong community that offers both assistance and numerous extension packages.

When people talk about big, successful open-source projects, they often think about software that can be used in large organizations. So we hear a great deal about the Linux operating system, the MySQL database, and even Ruby on Rails as a framework for developing Web applications. There's more to the story, though.



Acquia Dresses Up Drupal for Corporate Users

By Stacey Higginbotham, from GigaOm.com

Acquia, a Massachussetts-based startup, is announcing a supported product using Drupal, the open-source content management system behind many community aspects on the web, from sites such as Fast Company to The Onion.