Flatiron School Blog
Flatiron School
10 Useful to Somewhat Useful Bash Shortcuts: Every second saved is a second earned.com
The following is a guest post by Brendan Manley and originally appeared on his blog. Brendan is currently in the Ruby-003 class at The Flatiron School. You can follow him on Twitter here. 1. move cursor one word to the left: esc + b Isn’t it annoying that you often find yourself holding down your left arrow key […]
Flatiron School
On Convention
The following is a guest post by Kyle Shike and originally appeared on his blog. Kyle is currently in the Ruby-003 class at The Flatiron School. You can follow him on Twitter here. The use of convention in the programming ethos is a pretty remarkable thing. It exists outside of the ruthlessly binary computing process, and it ultimately […]
Flatiron School
Creating my first gem
The following is a guest post by Scott Luptowski and originally appeared on his blog. Scott is currently in the Ruby-003 class at The Flatiron School. You can follow him on Twitter here. A few weeks ago, I built a Ruby script to find the current standings of the English Premier League and display them in the terminal. […]
Flatiron School
Inheritance and Modules
At the end of last week, we discussed inheritance and modules. I needed to review it as not all of it had sunk-in at runtime-lecture. So here goes.
Flatiron School
Name Game Takeaways
The following is a guest post by Theo Vora and originally appeared on his blog. Theo is currently in the Ruby-003 class at The Flatiron School. You can follow him on Twitter here. After 3 weeks at the Flatiron School, my teammates and I decided to embark on a mini project. We had dabbled in a lot of […]
Flatiron School
Modules, Classes, Pterosaurs
The following is a guest post by Ivan Brennan and originally appeared on his blog. Ivan is currently in the Ruby-003 class at The Flatiron School. You can follow him on Twitter here. Pterosaurs, bats, and birds can/could all fly, but each evolved the ability independent of the others. This is an example of convergent evolution, the “independent evolution of […]
Flatiron School
Autovivification in Ruby
Autovivification is the concept that a hash style data structure can make inferences about its internal structure as it is being created
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