RR 430: Opal with Elia Schito episode artwork

EPISODE · Sep 17, 2019 · 59 MIN

RR 430: Opal with Elia Schito

from Ruby Rogues · host Charles M Wood

Episode Summary   Today’s guest Elia Schito has been a Ruby developer for 12+ years and works for Nebulab. During his career he looked for Ruby to JavaScript translators and found Opal. The panel discusses where Opal belongs within an app and when the compilation into JavaScript occurs. The main reason a person would want to use Opal is to avoid writing in JavaScript. Elia talks about the benefits of using Opal. One is that productivity is better in a language like Ruby. Also, if you’re working on a project that needs to get done quickly, it makes sense to use Opal so that your speed is not hindered. Elia talks about testing Opal with things like WebPacker and Hyperstack, and explains what Hyperstack is.  Opal recently released a newer, bigger version, and Elia talks about the features of the new release. He details what kind of JavaScript it produces and how to hook it into your CICD, how to run it locally, and overall how to use the compiler.  He talks about how to debug in Opal. He notes that during the development cycle in Opal, you can refresh your page and it will compile the Ruby code into JS, so if there are any errors you will see it immediately. Opal is compatible with other tools to check your code. In the future, Elia wants to increase the coverage of the core and standard library, and believes that Opal is a great way to increase your skills in Ruby and JavaScript. He talks about the general reception of Opal among users. Opal is a perfect fit for smaller teams or older fullstack developers, especially if you don’t have a frontend team Elia notes that Opal, much like anything else, is a matter of preference, and relates it to the past reliance on CoffeeScript. For developers who refuse to write in JavaScript, Opal is an excellent option. He talks about the speed of compiling ruby to JavaScript in Opal and how it supports keeping current with Rails versions and other frameworks.  The panel asks if the Opal community made any inroads with DHH for making it part of the Rails stack proper and whether Opal wants to be integrated with Rails. Elia talks about some of Opal’s contributions to the Ruby Community. Elia talks about what generally happens if you choose to use Opal in a project. Opal is small, but you will have to make some tradeoffs. You have to call your standard library from Opal, but there are many ways to overcome that. The show concludes with Elia calling on the community to help him resurrect the Volt framework. Panelists Andrew Mason David Kimura Nate Hopkins With special guest: Elia Schito Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Cloud 66 - Pain Free Rails Deployments Try Cloud 66 Rails for FREE & get $66 free credits with promo code RubyRogues My Ruby Story Links Opal  WebPackerStimulusHyperstackCapybaraCoffeeScriptDeviseClearwaterReactiveVolt frameworkNebulab Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks David Kimura: AWS Organization Consolidated BillingPingverse Nate Hopkins: Benjamin Moore paint Andrew Mason: Github Actions (beta) Elia Schito: Follow Elia on his websiteExplaining PostmodernismTexmateSpecial Guest: Elia Schito. Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacyBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/ruby-rogues--6102073/support.

Episode Summary   Today’s guest Elia Schito has been a Ruby developer for 12+ years and works for Nebulab. During his career he looked for Ruby to JavaScript translators and found Opal. The panel discusses where Opal belongs within an app and when the compilation into JavaScript occurs. The main reason a person would want to use Opal is to avoid writing in JavaScript. Elia talks about the benefits of using Opal. One is that productivity is better in a language like Ruby. Also, if you’re working on a project that needs to get done quickly, it makes sense to use Opal so that your speed is not hindered. Elia talks about testing Opal with things like WebPacker and Hyperstack, and explains what Hyperstack is.  Opal recently released a newer, bigger version, and Elia talks about the features of the new release. He details what kind of JavaScript it produces and how to hook it into your CICD, how to run it locally, and overall how to use the compiler.  He talks about how to debug in Opal. He notes that during the development cycle in Opal, you can refresh your page and it will compile the Ruby code into JS, so if there are any errors you will see it immediately. Opal is compatible with other tools to check your code. In the future, Elia wants to increase the coverage of the core and standard library, and believes that Opal is a great way to increase your skills in Ruby and JavaScript. He talks about the general reception of Opal among users. Opal is a perfect fit for smaller teams or older fullstack developers, especially if you don’t have a frontend team Elia notes that Opal, much like anything else, is a matter of preference, and relates it to the past reliance on CoffeeScript. For developers who refuse to write in JavaScript, Opal is an excellent option. He talks about the speed of compiling ruby to JavaScript in Opal and how it supports keeping current with Rails versions and other frameworks.  The panel asks if the Opal community made any inroads with DHH for making it part of the Rails stack proper and whether Opal wants to be integrated with Rails. Elia talks about some of Opal’s contributions to the Ruby Community. Elia talks about what generally happens if you choose to use Opal in a project. Opal is small, but you will have to make some tradeoffs. You have to call your standard library from Opal, but there are many ways to overcome that. The show concludes with Elia calling on the community to help him resurrect the Volt framework. Panelists Andrew Mason David Kimura Nate Hopkins With special guest: Elia Schito Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Cloud 66 - Pain Free Rails Deployments Try Cloud 66 Rails for FREE & get $66 free credits with promo code RubyRogues My Ruby Story Links Opal  WebPackerStimulusHyperstackCapybaraCoffeeScriptDevise<a...

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RR 430: Opal with Elia Schito

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Rogues Gallery Uncovered Simon Talbot Rogues Gallery Uncovered, the podcast of bad behaviour in period costume. True (ish) stories of history’s most fascinating and scandalous men and women.From Casanova and Mata Hari to Errol Flynn and Rasputin, it’s a history podcast with a difference. Join lovable rogue Simon Talbot every fortnight for bawdy, colourful tales of ‘Libertines, Lotharios and Complete Bastards.’  It’s funny, shocking, shameless and doesn’t mention Jane Austin once!It’s not suitable for kids or easily offended grownups.    Explicit 我又不是有機小農 Ruby & Amber & Emerald *未滿18歲請勿收聽* : 怎麼辦啦~~我是不是很有問題(;´༎ຶД༎ຶ`) : 我們又不是有機小農......我們都很有毒╮(╯_╰)╭ ✧歡迎來到三位小阿姨的聊天排毒紀錄✧ insta: @inorganicfarm 來信請到: [email protected] Powered by Firstory Hosting Explicit Tarot Is F*cking Cool Amelia Whitehouse and Ruby Wednesday Tarot iis Fuckiing Cool - The ReturnDue to the sheer unprecedented bloodlust for more, Final Girls, Ruby Wednesday and Amelia Whitehouse have teamed up once again to battle the chaos, violence and treachery of the Tarot. Will it be swift, clean slices or battered blunt force trauma?Only the whispers on the wind could possibly tell.@tarotisfuckingcool@mxrubywednesday@carneliankeeptarotSoundtrack by Laura Groves@laura_m_groves Explicit Bitter B*tch Juliana Folk Welcome to Bitter B*tch, where two Southern California moms dare to bare it all. Each week your hosts Ruby and Jules will be peeling back the layers of culture, mental health, wellness, and relationships, and serving it raw. No fluff, no pretense, just the unvarnished truth. Are you ready for a wild ride? Then join us, because life isn’t always sweet, and neither are we. Explicit

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This episode was published on September 17, 2019.

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Episode Summary   Today’s guest Elia Schito has been a Ruby developer for 12+ years and works for Nebulab. During his career he looked for Ruby to JavaScript translators and found Opal. The panel discusses where Opal belongs within an app and...

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