Sam Aaron

Sam Aaron![]() |
Workshop: "Advanced Ruby"
Track:
Tutorial
Time: Tuesday 09:00 - 12:00 Location: Henry Moore Room
Abstract:
Ruby describes itself as a dynamic programming language with a focus on simplicity and productivity. It has an elegant syntax that is natural to read and easy to write. These properties allow beginners to quickly become acquainted with, and effective in using, the language. At the same time, Ruby's flexibility and remarkably dynamic nature enables experts to harness its true power - the power which is at the heart of Ruby's success stories such as Ruby on Rails, RSpec and Sinatra.
This tutorial will provide an overview of the advanced concepts within Ruby. Together we will venture through the essence of what makes Ruby so flexible and dynamic. We will explore the power of open classes, meta-classes and modules and take a look at some of Ruby's many useful hook methods through the use of a series of examples. For those interested in interoperability, we will also look at communicating with other languages such as C, Java and Objective-C. Finally, we will bring many of these concepts together and look at a real world example illustrating the ability to fold Ruby into readable Domain Specific Languages, allowing us to express business logic in a way that is readable to clients.
No prior knowledge of Ruby is necessary to appreciate this tutorial, although a good understanding of Object Oriented concepts would certainly come in handy. Workshop: "Aesthetic Programming"
Track:
Tutorial
Time: Tuesday 13:00 - 16:00 Location: Henry Moore Room
Abstract:
Aesthetics is a concept that has influenced the thinking of creators of all forms including mathematicans, physicists, designers, architects and artists. How can we try and interpret this concept within the context of software? Is it purely an academic notion, or is there real value to be gained from considering the role of aesthetics in software practices? Is it possible that aesthetic programming can help produce more understandable, readable and maintainable code while still meeting performance requirements?
This tutorial will ask all of these questions and more. Together we will closely study the roles of perspective, context and language leading us to examine the notion that software is, not just a form of code, but a form of communication. We will consider our potential audiences and the varying importance of different readers, such as the computer, yourself, your pair programmer, the tests, the domain expert - and even your client.
We will discuss the importance of language, not only as a means of communicating with the computer, but as a means of communicating with our many, intentional and unintentional, audiences. We will discover that just as a good choice of algorithm can optimise performance, a good choice of language can optimise our communication and therefore help decrease mistakes, and increase our confidence that we are discussing the same concepts.
This tutorial will contain both discourse on these matters and associated material from academia and real world solutions. |
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