How to build a complete, real-world application from scratch with Ruby on Rails step by step.
A lot of Ruby code is "magic". We'll explain the magic and see how it works using the powerful tools Ruby gives us.
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When you receive a JSON response from an API endpoint, it's really easy to convert this to a Ruby hash. But hashes don't feel very Ruby-ish when you're working with them and you can't add methods and treat them like objects.
The core of an API wrapper Rubygem is defining the Resource endpoints so developers can make requests cleanly. We'll also learn how to handle pagination for endpoints that return a list of results.
The core of any API wrapper is the actions for create, read, update, and delete. We'll implement the CRUD for a resource so you can see how to do it and wire up everything together that we've built so far.
How do we test API requests in a Rubygem to make sure that we're integrating correctly with our backend? We'll learn how to use stubs to fake out the request and test our code without any network requests.
hCaptcha is a method to try detecting bots on your website. This episode, we'll walk through how to implement hCaptcha in a way that's compatible with Turbo using Stimulus.js and
Integrating with GitHub Apps in your Rails app can seem daunting. It's a bit more complicated than just redirecting to OAuth and receiving an access token. In this episode, we'll look at a basic GitHub app integration we used for the Rails Hackathon
In this episode we will look at using Ruby's built-in Net::HTTP class to build API clients for making http requests.
If you're building something with shared functionality, extracting a base class can be helpful to create a shared place each class can inherit from. We'll explore how to do this for our API clients and one of the tricky things about accessing constants.
In this episode we will look at how to use Webmock to test our API Clients.
In this episode we will look at how to make and use custom Rails generators to create new API clients.
Next up, we need to sync videos from our hosting provider's API so we'll build an API client from scratch using net/http in Ruby
Next, we need to sync videos using our API client which we'll do with a higher level abstraction to integrate with the API.
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