

#Ruby timecop code#
RubyMine 2021.1 beta 4 is out and includes JetBrains' new Code with Me collaborative development feature - the final release is now just around the corner.The always popular Euruko European Ruby conference is back (online this year, due to COVID) and if you want to speak, their call for speakers is open until April 18.This should open up some nice performance optimizations though potentially some bugs too. Rails 7 to Allow Run Queries on a Background Thread Pool - load_async will let ActiveRecord schedule queries to run asynchronously on a thread pool in a reasonably transparent way.

You can even run your old Rails app with modern Ruby versions.Īn Interview with David Heinemeier Hansson - While it does cover Rails’ beginnings, there’s also thoughts on open source and DHH’s campaign against the big tech monopolies and the work on Basecamp’s latest project, the Hey.com email system. Drop-in gem replacements are available for Rails 4.2, Rails 3.2 and Rails 2.3. Long Term Support for Ruby on Rails 4.2, 3.2 and 2.3 - with Support for Ruby 2.7 - Rails LTS provides extended support for old versions of Ruby on Rails.

Rails 5.2.5, 6.0.3.6 and 6.1.3.1 Released - Why are these releases significant? They fix the Marcel/MimeMagic dependency issue around licenses that burned super hot last week. This introductory post gives you the quickest way to creating a barebones extension. :-) Also, Jemma is a back with a tip of the week at the end of this issue, so be sure to enjoy that.Ī Rubyist's Walk Along the C-side: Hello World! - The first in a coming eight part series that takes an accessible tour through the often thorny world of implementing a Ruby extension in C. 😄 Hi folks! There's a time and a place for April Fools' jokes - today is certainly the right time (someone might want to tell Volkswagen that) but this isn't the place, so fingers crossed there aren't any stories that catch me out this week.
