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Paperback Best of Ruby Quiz Volume One Book

ISBN: 0976694077

ISBN13: 9780976694076

Best of Ruby Quiz Volume One

Solve these twenty-five popular programming puzzles, and sharpen your programming skills as you craft solutions. You'll find interesting and challenging programming puzzles including: 800 Numbers... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

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Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Essential reading for practical Rubying

This book is a collection of 25 challenges from the ruby quiz website, with a substantial discussion of various solutions. Lots of word and number games abound. Some examples will give you an idea of what to expect: generating crosswords layouts, ranking poker hands, building (and solving) mazes, generating and cracking ciphers. You could check out a lot of this from the website, but the dead-tree format is more readable, and the discussion is much expanded. Up to date books on Ruby (rather than Rails) are scarce, so we should cherish this publication. Good as the Pickaxe is, it lacks examples of fully-working programs. There are plenty here, packed full of Ruby idioms - I learnt an immense amount from the quizzes. You will want to either be taking copious notes while reading this, or be sat in front of the computer, so you can fire up irb and play with the language features you don't understand. Of course, as a collection of idioms, one could imagine the material being organised more efficiently, but it would also be a lot drier. So much for the Ruby, what about the Quiz? I must say that I was less enamoured of the book as a collection of puzzles. I didn't find the problems themselves that exciting, although that's probably just me. You probably already know if you're likely to find this sort of thing fun. What was more disappointing was that the discussion of the solutions is tilted towards presenting a solution in chunks of code, and then explaining what each bit of syntax was doing. There is much less emphasis on analysing the problems, or weighing up the solutions. This is not to say that the book is bereft of such analysis, but it is sporadic and specific to the exact form of the problem. I understood all the solutions, but did not feel that I had gained any insight into the generalities of how to classify problems and identify solutions. This is not really what the book is about, but the blurb does highlight algorithm selection and problem analysis as one of its selling points, so one might be justified in being a little disappointed. Nonetheless, I still give this book 4 stars, for the wealth of Ruby action contained within. Maybe future releases will supplant it, but for now, book-starved newcomers to Ruby, having finished the Pickaxe, should consider this book as a must-read source of idioms and example programs, with a fun practical bent as a bonus. Well worth your money.

For the programmer in need of a project

I can't count the number of times I've been learning a language only to find that I don't have a project to work on. Best of Ruby Quiz is a wonderful solution to this problem. Filled with interesting problems and well documented solutions there is certain to be a quiz that fits your fancy and you _will_ learn something very cool. Ruby Quiz is online, but the best of book has distilled the free-for-all online atmosphere into a polished collection with the answer (or answers) that the author were most useful and complete. Great way to learn about the hacker culture too as the answers often include tidbits about why an answer was done the way it was (ie: I had never heard of programmer golf before reading this book)

The way to master Ruby

Do you want to master Ruby? Do you own the PickAxe2 but you still have some doubts here and there? Are you worried you do not understand some obscure features of Ruby? If you answered 'yes' to the above questions, then it's your lucky day: Best of Ruby Quiz will lead you from Ruby-newbieness to Ruby-mastery. Buy it. You'll love it. It's worth each and every dollar!

Exercise Your Ruby Chops

Picking up the basics of a new programming language such as Ruby can be enjoyable, but if you can't apply what you've learned quickly that knowledge may be fleeting. "Best of Ruby Quiz" can help out. "Best of Ruby Quiz" contains twenty-five fun programming challenges ("quizzes") that are excellent for exercising your new Ruby chops. The quizzes vary in difficulty and each includes in-depth discussions covering multiple solutions. More importantly, the quizzes really are fun! The quizzes in "Best of Ruby Quiz" are excerpted from the author's web site "Ruby Quiz" so while you could certainly save yourself a few bucks and just visit the site, the book is a much more polished product. Also, I believe that the immediacy of the book with its superior layout really enhances the learning experience when compared to the web site. This book makes a great companion to the Pickaxe and the two books form an effective one-two punch for learning Ruby. So go ahead and sit down with a copy of this book, fire up the code editor of your choice, pick a quiz and start coding. Not only will you learn a thing or two about Ruby, you'll have a good time doing it.

The best challenges from ruby quiz on a hard copy

As a programmer trying to invest in his knowledge portfolio, there is a ton of literature on new ideas, techniques and tools. But it is more rare to find books that contain practical examples on how to use these techniques. When it comes to solving typical problems in programming, 'The Best of Ruby Quiz' is such a book. The book is splitted into two parts: The first part contains the challenges, the second part has the answers. The quizzes itself range from very simple to moderate tasks, which you could (in theory at least) solve in a few hours. Some of the tasks are somehow related to everyday programming tasks (like transforming a proprietary text format to xml, some are more abstract (like searching for the words that are banned in a spam filter). But every challenge is fun and more than one way to solve it. But of course the answers are the real gold in this book: They are written by some of the elite programmers in the Ruby Community, like Jim Weinrich or Florian Gross. When trying to solve some of the problems, I often found myself embarrassed by a much more simple and logical solution after looking at the solutions from these guys. This book is not only for Ruby programmers. Sure it has a bit from a cookbook for the ruby programming language, as reading through the code will teach you a lot about the language. But the main propose is giving you questions and answers to think about programming, and this is valuable for everyone in that field.
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