Rails Logs: A Blessing in Development, a Headache in Production March 31, 2026 The Love Affair π See the LIVE DEMO in action MapView Render maps directly from your backend no external APIs required. Fast, controlled, and production-ready. Try the demo β You know the feeling. Local machine, Rails server running, something breaks. You glance … Continue reading Rails Logs: A Blessing in Development, a Headache in Production
Tag: Ruby
libgd-gis: Filling Ruby’s Graphics Gap and Building an Ecosystem
libgd-gis: Filling Ruby's Graphics Gap and Building an Ecosystem March 26, 2026 For years, generating map tiles, GIS visualizations, and fast raster graphics in Ruby has been a painful experience. ImageMagick derivatives were slow. External services added latency and complexity. The old ruby-gd binding languished unmaintained. Then ruby-libgd arrived - a modern, actively maintained binding … Continue reading libgd-gis: Filling Ruby’s Graphics Gap and Building an Ecosystem
FFI: How Ruby Talks to C
March 25, 2026 Published on RubyStackNews Scan to try π― Live Demo Available Introducing MapView Render beautiful, production-ready maps directly from your Ruby backend. No external APIs. No dependencies. Just pure speed and control. β Zero external dependencies β Lightning-fast rendering β Production-ready & battle-tested Try the Live Demo β Read Docs Ruby is a … Continue reading FFI: How Ruby Talks to C
The Odin Project: Why Itβs One of the Best Ways to Learn Web Development
March 24, 2026 Scan to try π― Live Demo Available Introducing MapView Render beautiful, production-ready maps directly from your Ruby backend. No external APIs. No dependencies. Just pure speed and control. β Zero external dependencies β Lightning-fast rendering β Production-ready & battle-tested Try the Live Demo β Read Docs If youβre looking for a structured, … Continue reading The Odin Project: Why Itβs One of the Best Ways to Learn Web Development
Choosing the Right Debugger: TracePoint, ISeq, and why your choice of debugger affects more than just comfort
Choosing the Right Debugger March 12, 2026 A Ruby Developer's Guide to TracePoint, ISeq, and why your choice of debugger affects more than just comfort If you write Ruby, you debug Ruby. Whether it's a subtle off-by-one error in a data pipeline or a race condition buried in a Rails controller, debugging is as much … Continue reading Choosing the Right Debugger: TracePoint, ISeq, and why your choice of debugger affects more than just comfort
Ruby on Rails on WebAssembly: A Full-Stack, In-Browser Journey
March 11, 2026 Built for Ruby on Rails Build Maps WithoutGoogle APIs Generate beautiful production-ready maps directly from your Rails backend. Fast rendering, zero external dependencies, full control. View Live Demo β Read Docs β No API fees β Self-hosted β Rails Native β Fast Rendering Why developers switch Replace expensive map stacks. Stop relying … Continue reading Ruby on Rails on WebAssembly: A Full-Stack, In-Browser Journey
mruby Gems: Extending Ruby for Embedded Systems
mruby Gems: Extending Ruby for Embedded Systems March 11, 2026 Most developers associate Ruby with web development. Frameworks like Ruby on Rails helped Ruby become one of the most productive languages for building web applications. However, Ruby is not limited to servers or web frameworks. Ruby can also run in places far away from data … Continue reading mruby Gems: Extending Ruby for Embedded Systems
The Joy of Small Scripts: Automating Ruby Community Events
The Joy of Small Scripts: Automating Ruby Community Events March 8, 2026 For many developers who experienced the early days of the hacker culture and the free software movement, programming once had a different rhythm. It was exploratory. Curious. Creative. Developers wrote small tools, scripts, and experiments simply because they could. Those scripts often solved … Continue reading The Joy of Small Scripts: Automating Ruby Community Events
Understanding Convolution Filters in Image Processing (and Adding Them to Ruby-LibGD v0.2.5)
Understanding Convolution Filters in Image Processing (and Adding Them to Ruby-LibGD v0.2.5) March 3, 2026 Today I implemented support for custom convolution filters in Ruby-LibGD, enabling the application of kernels such as blur, sharpen, and edge detection directly from Ruby. At first glance, this may look like just another image filter. In reality, convolution is … Continue reading Understanding Convolution Filters in Image Processing (and Adding Them to Ruby-LibGD v0.2.5)
π Terminal UX in Ruby: Beautiful Tools Without Leaving the Shell
March 1, 2026 Built for Ruby on Rails Build Maps WithoutGoogle APIs Generate beautiful production-ready maps directly from your Rails backend. Fast rendering, zero external dependencies, full control. View Live Demo β Read Docs β No API fees β Self-hosted β Rails Native β Fast Rendering Why developers switch Replace expensive map stacks. Stop relying … Continue reading π Terminal UX in Ruby: Beautiful Tools Without Leaving the Shell









