Stateless Code | Why Rails in the 2020s? @StatelessCode | Uploaded October 2021 | Updated October 2024, 3 hours ago.
As I record this video, it is 2021, and I would contend there has never yet been a better time to use Ruby on Rails on a project.
Software development is often about trade-offs, and Rails still makes all of the trade-offs I would want to make better than any other framework I'm aware of.
Human capital is your most valuable form of capital, and Rails lets you take a very small team and get a robust, working full-featured, secure application released quickly so that you can get feedback and iterate.
Speaking of iteration, idiomatic Rails development with a robust test suite and the ability to generate and run database migrations allows you to make changes and lends itself very well to working in an agile framework.
While Rails has continued to focus on developer happiness, Ruby's performance has greatly improved in recent years, making the performance side of the trade-off less of a concern.
This video is CC0 - No rights reserved. All code is released under the UNLICENSE. Stateless Code denies the concept of "intellectual property". Copying is not stealing.
This video is CC0 - No rights reserved. (YouTube doesn't allow this option when publishing.) All code is released under the UNLICENSE. Stateless Code denies the concept of "intellectual property". Copying is not stealing.
As I record this video, it is 2021, and I would contend there has never yet been a better time to use Ruby on Rails on a project.
Software development is often about trade-offs, and Rails still makes all of the trade-offs I would want to make better than any other framework I'm aware of.
Human capital is your most valuable form of capital, and Rails lets you take a very small team and get a robust, working full-featured, secure application released quickly so that you can get feedback and iterate.
Speaking of iteration, idiomatic Rails development with a robust test suite and the ability to generate and run database migrations allows you to make changes and lends itself very well to working in an agile framework.
While Rails has continued to focus on developer happiness, Ruby's performance has greatly improved in recent years, making the performance side of the trade-off less of a concern.
This video is CC0 - No rights reserved. All code is released under the UNLICENSE. Stateless Code denies the concept of "intellectual property". Copying is not stealing.
This video is CC0 - No rights reserved. (YouTube doesn't allow this option when publishing.) All code is released under the UNLICENSE. Stateless Code denies the concept of "intellectual property". Copying is not stealing.