1

Getting Real Review

Posted in Software Development at September 1st, 2006 / 1 Comment »

I have come across the works of Pete Wright, as I have come to know him somewhat. He does a lot of agile and XP development, and that is something that I have been wanting to learn more about. While reading through his blog, he mentioned a book, Getting Real, so I had to take a look and review it over.

The book is a publication from the fine folks at 37signals and brings to light some of their coding philosophies, such as how they do agile development. It is a cheap book and you can achieve instant gratification from purchasing it online because the book is currently only available as a PDF download. The voice of the book takes a stand and casts a very bright light in order to bring out the contrast of other methods of software development and project management. The authors like to shock you up a bit by making claims of saying “no” to your customers or saying “no” to project meetings. It’s like a cold shower for your brain, and once it has gotten its attention, it reasons with you as to why you would want to say no in certain situations and why you would want to say yes.

Read the rest of this entry »

A couple of months ago, I was shown the article that DHH wrote after he gave his presentation at RailsConf 2006. I looked at it then and kind of shrugged it off, mainly because I really didn’t know what the presentation was really about.

Tonight I found video of that presentation and I got excited about CRUD. It pointed out that I’ve been making some controllers a little bloated. I have coupled much functionality into one controller; when looking back, I clearly could have separated out some functionality.

Read the rest of this entry »

1

SVN Overview

Posted in Version Control at August 28th, 2006 / 1 Comment »

First and foremost, this blog is for me. It’s kind of a collection of things that I’m learning and want to learn. So for me, I’m going to start with the basics of SVN

I first used CVS and it does it’s job. There are somethings I wish that were easier. That’s where SVN comes in. A lot of the commands are the same. svn add or svn commit is not that much different from that of cvs add or cvs commit, unless you get to some of the other features.

Read the rest of this entry »