O'Reilly's "The Ruby Language" for $9.99 (limited time) (oreilly.com)
I'm not a shill. I promise.
Also has illustrations from _why, so could mean it's got some collectible status?
HatTip: RubyInside via LinkedIn
Also has illustrations from _why, so could mean it's got some collectible status?
HatTip: RubyInside via LinkedIn
26 comments
[ 4.1 ms ] story [ 71.4 ms ] threadPrint is always better than digital in my opinion though I haven't tried a kindle yet.
edit: amazon has it for 8 dollars for the kindle( which can be read on am iphone if you're so inclined)
http://appshopper.com/books/the-ruby-programming-language
They say that they worked with Lexcycle, makers of Stanza, the iPhone ebook-reader, to make this work well.
At the bottom of the page are 5 screenshots showing how the book looks on an iPhone.
For a novel, though, I definitely prefer the Kindle or a real book. (Real books annoy me now, because they are harder to hold. They are too springy, and fighting that gets tiring. Yes... I am lazy...)
While I was unemployed, one of the recruiters I was with mentioned that they referred to me as the "Ruby on Rails" guy. Which kinda sucked because they were only looking at jobs for me with "web" application.
I turned around and wrote a FXRuby wrapper for ai4r that can be run on the desktop sort of as a reaction to show that Ruby can run on the desktop too.
Ebook is the only way to go for this. I have this book one click away at all times (via launchbar on osx), for quick reference.
The quality of the PDF is immaculate. Only the cover pages are scanned in: the rest of it is glorious vector text and graphics, allowing one to zoom in and out as much as they could want, similar to what I like to do when reading web sites. It's also searchable, which regular books are not.
The fact that it's a digital work forces one to scan the book, skipping past parts one recognizes, putting in practice those they don't.
Finally, a digital edition enables one to easily copy-paste those parts of code he or she doesn't feel like typing out themselves.
It's an experiment, there are more e-books available for that price, including several Perl books: http://use.perl.org/~brian_d_foy/journal/39524