I've been trying to learn Rails for a while now and I just can not piece it all together with random blogs and SO questions, so I've decided I need a full book/ebook. Can anyone suggest a good one? I've been looking at Agile Web Development With Rails 4th edition. There is an old question about Ruby On Rails books but it is from 2008 and there has been new Rails releases since then. I basically would like a book that is more than a reference, but also doesn't assume I'm a non-programmer. Also, I already know a lot of Ruby.

So, what books would you recommend that is up to date and also doesn't treat me like a baby?

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80% accept rate
community wiki? – Bo Tian May 4 '10 at 14:56
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3 Answers

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I just got done going through what you did. Yes, a lot of the rails books are behind right now because they're waiting to cash in on the release of Rails 3. There are plenty of good books out, but they're a bit behind so you have to find some other docs to make up for it.

Here is exactly what I did:

  • Agile Web Development in Rails, 3rd Edition (you linked to the 4th one, which covers Rails 3 and isn't out until October 2010). This one is great, but a couple minor revisions behind. This is the Rails bible and a must-have.
  • Subscribe to the RSS feed at http://railscasts.com/ and read, read read. Weekly screencasts covers new features added to rails and plugins. After you read the edge rails blog (below), check for a screencast here - you'll normally find one.
  • The rails guides are a nice addition to your book. They're always up to date. They aren't as thorough as the book, but they're good for reference and a second viewpoint.
  • Finally, to learn about the features that got added to rails after the book was published, check out what's new in edge rails. This site has since been extracted to its own site at http://edgerails.info/, but I found that some links were broken on the new site that aren't on the old one, so use both. Find out what version of rails was used in your book (normally in the preface or intro) and then look for all posts on this site that come after that version.
  • The railscasts site itself is open source and is a good example of a Rails app. I recommend this one because you'll be using the site itself a lot, and it's small and simple.
  • After you feel more comfortable, check out some bigger example Rails apps.
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Ah, didn't notice that it hadn't been released yet – Earlz May 3 '10 at 19:27
@rye So looking at the 4th edition apparently it is available "in beta" right now, so I could buy it I suppose? I think I'll end up doing that... – Earlz May 4 '10 at 0:01
@Earlz: Yes, you could if you want. Basically you get an early and unfinished version of the book, and you can download it as the author updates it. When it's finished, you can download the full version as normal. – ryeguy May 4 '10 at 0:33
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Two books are coming out soon:

The Rails Way updated for Rails 3 is coming out, but not until Sept. 6th. And at least one other Rails 3 book's in the works but won't be out for a while.

UPDATE: Here are another two which should be very suitable given your background -- just beware that some of their content will be dated. Still, for the conceptual elements alone they may be worthwhile.

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Well I don't want to wait forever to learn Rails, but do you think it'd be bad to learn an older version of Rails? Like how much relearning will I have to do to use Rails3? I've heard it is very different from previous releases – Earlz May 3 '10 at 19:30
@Earlz, Rails 3 will be deprecating earlier APIs rather than removing them outright afaik, so things that worked in 2.3.x should still work until 3.1 or 3.2. So you should be in great shape if you learn a recent 2 version. (There will be plenty of guides to ease the transition from 2 to 3, too.) – fig May 3 '10 at 19:34
yea, but how huge is the transition? Am I better off to try and learn Rails 2 and later do a transition? Or is Rails 3 worth waiting for? (as in, it makes things easier, prevents bad habits/hacks, etc) – Earlz May 3 '10 at 19:48
+1 for The Rails Way. The edition for Rails 2 was amazing and the next one is going to rock too. – kikito May 3 '10 at 21:36
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I will be honest with you, Rails books and books on testing in Ruby tend to be out of date BEFORE they are released.

My advice? Don't bother, read the guides - sure, they aren't going to be as in-depth as any of the books, but, they cover a reasonable amount of ground and you can supplement this by looking at the API and indeed the Rails source code.

I will however say, the same is NOT true for Ruby books - especially The Ruby Way by Hal Fulton, but, being a Ruby programmer, you probably already knew that.

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Well I'm not an expert Ruby programmer by any means, but I know my way around it enough that anything I don't know is just a API reference away. The same can not be said for the huge monster that is Rails. – Earlz May 3 '10 at 22:31
Lerning ruby is much more important than learning rails. Rails just shows you where to put your code(i know it does more, but this is the part that makes rails best) – gkaykck Sep 8 '10 at 19:55
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