top | item 46386281 (no title) bvan | 2 months ago For someone wanting to learn Ruby in 2025/26, what are some good up-to-date references, outside of the official documentation? Are there any recently-published books which stand-out? discuss order hn newest Kerrick|2 months ago The PickAxe is still amazing. You can buy the fifth edition (for Ruby 3.3) in paper now, or the sixth edition (for Ruby 4.0) as a beta ebook now.5th: https://pragprog.com/titles/ruby5/programming-ruby-3-3-5th-e...6th: https://pragprog.com/titles/ruby6/programming-ruby-4-6th-edi...For a timeline-oriented reference of changes, check out https://rubyreferences.github.io/rubychanges/ and its individual pages. dueyfinster|2 months ago I've done the pragmatic studio elixir and erlang courses and they are high quality. They do the same for Ruby and Rails[1][1]: https://pragmaticstudio.com/rails
Kerrick|2 months ago The PickAxe is still amazing. You can buy the fifth edition (for Ruby 3.3) in paper now, or the sixth edition (for Ruby 4.0) as a beta ebook now.5th: https://pragprog.com/titles/ruby5/programming-ruby-3-3-5th-e...6th: https://pragprog.com/titles/ruby6/programming-ruby-4-6th-edi...For a timeline-oriented reference of changes, check out https://rubyreferences.github.io/rubychanges/ and its individual pages.
dueyfinster|2 months ago I've done the pragmatic studio elixir and erlang courses and they are high quality. They do the same for Ruby and Rails[1][1]: https://pragmaticstudio.com/rails
Kerrick|2 months ago
5th: https://pragprog.com/titles/ruby5/programming-ruby-3-3-5th-e...
6th: https://pragprog.com/titles/ruby6/programming-ruby-4-6th-edi...
For a timeline-oriented reference of changes, check out https://rubyreferences.github.io/rubychanges/ and its individual pages.
dueyfinster|2 months ago
[1]: https://pragmaticstudio.com/rails