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John Hawthorn f84773a587 Deprecate rendering templates with . in the name
Allowing templates with "." introduces some ambiguity. Is index.html.erb
a template named "index" with format "html", or is it a template named
"index.html" without a format? We know it's probably the former, but if
we asked ActionView to render "index.html" we would currently get some
combination of the two: a Template with index.html as the name and
virtual path, but with html as the format.

This deprecates having "." anywhere in the template's name, we should
reserve this character for specifying formats. I think in 99% of cases
this will be people specifying `index.html` instead of simply `index`.

This was actually once deprecated in the 3.x series (removed in
6c57177f2c) but I don't think we can rely
on nobody having introduced this in the past 8 years.
2020-03-31 21:55:19 -07:00
.github Add rubocop group to Gemfile for use in CI 2020-03-27 23:55:26 +00:00
actioncable add rescue_with support to ActionCable::Connection::Base 2020-03-20 14:49:38 -07:00
actionmailbox Add a way to deliver inbound emails by source (#38849) 2020-03-31 16:46:13 -07:00
actionmailer Enable HashTransformKeys and HashTransformValues cops 2020-02-20 22:37:32 +00:00
actionpack Deprecate rendering templates with . in the name 2020-03-31 21:55:19 -07:00
actiontext .annotate_template_file_names annotates HTML output with template file names 2020-03-30 14:50:01 -06:00
actionview Deprecate rendering templates with . in the name 2020-03-31 21:55:19 -07:00
activejob Sanitize and add missing docs on ActiveJob::QueueAdapters class. [ci skip] 2020-03-22 11:28:03 +01:00
activemodel Merge pull request #38784 from JuanitoFatas/doc/am-absence-validator 2020-03-21 22:49:56 +09:00
activerecord Add an example how to change column in "change_table" block. 2020-03-31 10:27:36 +02:00
activestorage .annotate_template_file_names annotates HTML output with template file names 2020-03-30 14:50:01 -06:00
activesupport Redis cache store: fix expanding empty keys with no namespace 2020-03-31 17:39:06 -04:00
ci Remove .travis.yml and ci/travis.rb 2020-01-02 09:27:53 +09:00
guides Merge pull request #37885 from gwincr11/cg-document-checkboxes 2020-03-31 10:34:32 -04:00
railties Add a way to deliver inbound emails by source (#38849) 2020-03-31 16:46:13 -07:00
tasks Fix release task 2019-11-27 12:24:31 -03:00
tools Enable Layout/EmptyLinesAroundAccessModifier cop 2019-06-13 12:00:45 +09:00
.gitattributes
.gitignore
.rubocop.yml Enable HashTransformKeys and HashTransformValues cops 2020-02-20 22:37:32 +00:00
.yardopts Updating .yardopts to document .rb files in [GEM]/app 2019-08-20 13:25:36 -04:00
.yarnrc
Brewfile Address Error: caskroom/cask was moved. Tap homebrew/cask-cask instead. 2019-12-18 18:50:57 +09:00
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
CONTRIBUTING.md
Gemfile Add rubocop group to Gemfile for use in CI 2020-03-27 23:55:26 +00:00
Gemfile.lock Updates pg gem version 2020-03-30 11:05:56 +01:00
MIT-LICENSE Bump license years from 2019 to 2020 [ci skip] 2020-01-01 15:10:31 +05:30
package.json
rails.gemspec Add Rails changelog URI 2019-11-28 07:57:37 +11:00
RAILS_VERSION
Rakefile
README.md remove reference to global rails command and replace with bin/rails 2019-12-27 19:32:37 +00:00
RELEASING_RAILS.md update https urls [ci skip] 2019-10-03 11:01:32 +02:00
version.rb
yarn.lock chore: updated package.json to include fsevents compatible version for 2020-03-04 11:45:11 +05:30

Welcome to Rails

What's Rails?

Rails is a web-application framework that includes everything needed to create database-backed web applications according to the Model-View-Controller (MVC) pattern.

Understanding the MVC pattern is key to understanding Rails. MVC divides your application into three layers: Model, View, and Controller, each with a specific responsibility.

Model layer

The Model layer represents the domain model (such as Account, Product, Person, Post, etc.) and encapsulates the business logic specific to your application. In Rails, database-backed model classes are derived from ActiveRecord::Base. Active Record allows you to present the data from database rows as objects and embellish these data objects with business logic methods. Although most Rails models are backed by a database, models can also be ordinary Ruby classes, or Ruby classes that implement a set of interfaces as provided by the Active Model module.

Controller layer

The Controller layer is responsible for handling incoming HTTP requests and providing a suitable response. Usually, this means returning HTML, but Rails controllers can also generate XML, JSON, PDFs, mobile-specific views, and more. Controllers load and manipulate models, and render view templates in order to generate the appropriate HTTP response. In Rails, incoming requests are routed by Action Dispatch to an appropriate controller, and controller classes are derived from ActionController::Base. Action Dispatch and Action Controller are bundled together in Action Pack.

View layer

The View layer is composed of "templates" that are responsible for providing appropriate representations of your application's resources. Templates can come in a variety of formats, but most view templates are HTML with embedded Ruby code (ERB files). Views are typically rendered to generate a controller response or to generate the body of an email. In Rails, View generation is handled by Action View.

Frameworks and libraries

Active Record, Active Model, Action Pack, and Action View can each be used independently outside Rails. In addition to that, Rails also comes with Action Mailer, a library to generate and send emails; Action Mailbox, a library to receive emails within a Rails application; Active Job, a framework for declaring jobs and making them run on a variety of queuing backends; Action Cable, a framework to integrate WebSockets with a Rails application; Active Storage, a library to attach cloud and local files to Rails applications; Action Text, a library to handle rich text content; and Active Support, a collection of utility classes and standard library extensions that are useful for Rails, and may also be used independently outside Rails.

Getting Started

  1. Install Rails at the command prompt if you haven't yet:

     $ gem install rails
    
  2. At the command prompt, create a new Rails application:

     $ rails new myapp
    

    where "myapp" is the application name.

  3. Change directory to myapp and start the web server:

     $ cd myapp
     $ bin/rails server
    

    Run with --help or -h for options.

  4. Go to http://localhost:3000 and you'll see: "Yay! Youre on Rails!"

  5. Follow the guidelines to start developing your application. You may find the following resources handy:

Contributing

Code Triage Badge

We encourage you to contribute to Ruby on Rails! Please check out the Contributing to Ruby on Rails guide for guidelines about how to proceed. Join us!

Trying to report a possible security vulnerability in Rails? Please check out our security policy for guidelines about how to proceed.

Everyone interacting in Rails and its sub-projects' codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms, and mailing lists is expected to follow the Rails code of conduct.

Code Status

Build Status

License

Ruby on Rails is released under the MIT License.