
Ruby Pocket Reference
Instant Help for Ruby Programmers
by Michael Fitzgerald
Should I read this?
appears in Ruby, Programming, and Technology.
Updated for Ruby 2.2, this handy reference offers brief yet clear explanations of Ruby's core elementsfrom operators to blocks to documentation creationand highlights the key features you may work with every day. Need to know the correct syntax for a conditional Forgot the name of that String method This book is organized to help you find the...
Looking for Kindle, hardcover, paperback, or audiobook editions?
Check formats, pricing, and current availability directly.
Why recommended
appears in Ruby, Programming, and Technology.
Recommendation Signals
Recommendation proof is sourced from public posts, interviews, reading lists, and cited references.
No verified recommendation proof available yet.
Appears In

Not sure if this is the right fit?
Consider Dealers of Lightning by Michael A. Hiltzik. Recommended by 8 sources.
“Starts as a vivid inventory of inventors, projects, and lab culture at Xerox PARC, written in reporterly detail that foregrounds anecdotes and corporate memos. Main value is a textured sense of how early GUI, networking, and printing research happened and how personalities and management decisions shaped outcomes. Limitation: the narrative can dwell on minutiae and internal politics, slowing forward momentum and offering few clear takeaways for readers seeking practical lessons or modern startup playbooks. It reads like sustained magazine reporting, so detail-oriented readers are rewarded while those after a brisk how-to may be frustrated.”
Similar books

Dealers of Lightning
Michael A. Hiltzik
Adaptive Code via C#
Gary McLean
JavaScript
David Flanagan
Artificial Intelligence,
Stuart Russell
Patterns of Enterprise Application Architecture,
Martin Fowler
Effective Ruby
Peter J. Jones
Algorithms Unlocked
Thomas H. Cormen
C? STL Cookbook
Jacek GalowiczHow recommendation signals are reviewed
Each recommendation is collected from a public source — interviews, articles, or curated lists — and linked to its original URL. Books with many verifiable recommendations from respected people rank higher.
