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Noel Rappin - Modern Front-End Development for Rails: Webpacker, Stimulus, and React: Hotwire, Stimulus, Turbo, and React

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Noel Rappin Modern Front-End Development for Rails: Webpacker, Stimulus, and React: Hotwire, Stimulus, Turbo, and React
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Modern Front-End Development for Rails: Webpacker, Stimulus, and React: Hotwire, Stimulus, Turbo, and React: summary, description and annotation

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Improve the user experience for your Rails app with rich, engaging client-side interactions. Learn to use the Rails 6 tools and simplify the complex JavaScript ecosystem. Itx27s easier than ever to build user interactions with the Webpacker gem and Stimulus. You can add great front-end flair without much extra complication. Add React to build an even more extensive set of client-side features. Structure your code for different levels of client-side needs with these powerful options. Add to your toolkit today! Itx27s hard to have a Rails application without integrating some client-side logic. But client-side coding tools, and the Rails tools for integrating with them, all change continuously. Rails 6 simplifies client-side integration with the Webpacker gem. Itx27s the default tool for building client-side assets for use by web browsers. Learn how to use Rails 6 and Webpacker to build rich front-end logic into your Rails applications. The job is even easier with Stimulus, a library that brings Rails conventions to JavaScript tools. Add in some React, a popular framework that automatically updates the browser when your data changes. Learn the basics of webpack, Webpacker, and TypeScript, and add pizazz to your application. Structure your web application to best manage your state. Learn how to interact with data on the server while still keeping the user experience interactive. Use the type system in TypeScript to expand on JavaScript and help prevent error conditions. Debug and test your front-end application with tools specific to each framework. There are a lot of ways to do client-side coding, and Rails is here to help. What You Need: This book requires Ruby on Rails 6.0+, React 16.8.0+. Other dependencies will be added by Rails.

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Modern Front-End Development for Rails
Hotwire, Stimulus, Turbo, and React
by Noel Rappin
Version: P1.0 (June 2021)

Copyright 2021 The Pragmatic Programmers, LLC. This book is licensed to the individual who purchased it. We don't copy-protect it because that would limit your ability to use it for your own purposes. Please don't break this trustyou can use this across all of your devices but please do not share this copy with other members of your team, with friends, or via file sharing services. Thanks.

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Table of Contents
Copyright 2021, The Pragmatic Bookshelf.
Early Praise for Modern Front-End Development for Rails

This book sets an audacious goaland delivers on it. It teaches up-to-date, comprehensive strategies on front-end development for your Rails app without straying too far from conventions familiar to Rails developers.

Kevin Murphy
Software Developer

Theres a night-and-day difference between how Stimulus/Hotwire and React think about client-side code. Noels unique contribution in this book is that he deeply understands both toolsallowing him to accurately present the functionality, mindset, and use cases of each. This book will help you make an informed decision on your client-side approach, whether its choosing one for the first time or assessing whether to make a change.

Josh Justice
Web Platform Lead, Big Nerd Ranch

In my time working with Rails on the front end, Ive never come across a single resource that covers as much ground with this level of detail. This is the book to get if you want to understand working with front-end Rails.

Emmanuel Hayford
Senior Rails, WebRTC Engineer, DSIRF, Austria

The trouble with front-end development these days is the overwhelming number of things to learn just to get started. Frameworks, bundlers, flavors of JavaScript (just to name a few)how is a person supposed to learn anything when it seems they need to know everything else first? This book walks you through not just how to use some popular front-end tools (and better than most other texts Ive come across), but also gives you the context you need to decide for yourself which tool is best and when.

Jacob Stoebel
Software Engineer

Acknowledgments

As I write this, its been nearly two and a half years since I had the idea for this book, which is a long time for a technical book.

First, I want to thank everybody at the Pragmatic Bookshelf. When I said that the book needed to be delayed indefinitely because the Rails team was going to release a big library some hand-wavy time in the future, they were completely in agreement.

Also, thanks to the people who bought this book in an early beta and have all been extremely patient waiting for the final version to come out.

My editor, Katharine Dvorak, is always great to work with. She helped immensely in structuring this book and making sure that all the books topics followed clearly from one to the other.

This book depends on the work of many open source teams. Thanks to David Heinemeier Hansson and the Rails core team, Sam Stephenson, and Javan Makhmali and the Hotwire core teams. They were all very helpful and provided me with some information about Hotwire that enabled me to move quickly once Hotwire was released publicly. Thanks also to the React core team for all their work.

Betsy Haibel, Penelope Phippen, and Justin Searls are all people that I will occasionally message out of the blue asking them to verify something about how all these tools work. Thanks to all of them for thoughtful responses.

This book had a tremendous number of reviewers who helped find a number of errors and helped me clarify the text throughout. Thanks to Kevin Barnes, Dave Chmura, Nathan Dalo, Ashish Dixit, Betsy Haibel, Emmanuel Hayford, Koichi Hirano, Josh Justice, Aaron Kelton, Joel Lee, Gavin Montague, Kevin Murphy, Maricris Nonato, Adi Nugroho, Matt Polito, Americo Savinon, Jacob Stoebel, and Martin Streicher. Jeff Sutherland made a number of helpful errata posts on Devtalk. Matou Bork wrote a series on Dev.to about Hey.com that was extremely helpful in understanding Hotwire.

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