@Dorohvich and @tamouse I have checked your books but as I do not know the 
author I am not sure if I am picking the right ones, may you tell me the 
authors please? 

Thank you ! 

On Wednesday, 24 June 2015 09:39:30 UTC+1, David Díaz Clavijo wrote:
>
> @Brent , I have checked the example of "Level up" but it was highly 
> focused on pair programming an other subjects what confuses me a bit :S 
>
> On Tuesday, 23 June 2015 12:46:12 UTC+1, David Díaz Clavijo wrote:
>>
>> Thank you very much for all answers ! 
>>
>> @tamouse I'm already working on a real application ^^, so everything I 
>> read I think about many ways of applying it. 
>>
>> On Sunday, 21 June 2015 15:32:38 UTC+1, tamouse wrote:
>>>
>>> All those mentioned are great books to read. I'm tossing in "Practicing 
>>> Rails" and "Rails 4 in Action", I'm also going to say it doesn't really 
>>> matter. What I think does matter is you start working on a rails 
>>> application, even following one of the many tutorials; at least work 
>>> through a couple of full examples so you have something real to hang what 
>>> you're learning upon.
>>>
>>> On Sat, Jun 20, 2015 at 3:24 PM, Brent <br...@kearneys.ca> wrote:
>>>
>>>> "Level Up!" by Steven Talcott Smith is a great book for aspiring 
>>>> software developers. Rails is the main example used in the book, since it 
>>>> is the platform upon which the author crafted his own career. The book 
>>>> describes a path to excellence in software development, describing 
>>>> skillets 
>>>> and practices that are now the ideal model that most successful Rails 
>>>> shops 
>>>> are using today.
>>>>
>>>> https://leanpub.com/level_up
>>>>
>>>> It changed my approach to learning and practicing software development, 
>>>> with nearly immediate results.
>>>>
>>>> Cheers,
>>>> Brent
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Friday, June 19, 2015 at 10:34:21 AM UTC-6, David Díaz Clavijo wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>
>>>>> My name is David, this is my first post here. Thanks for having this 
>>>>> space and allow me to post a question. Going to the nitty-gritty:
>>>>>
>>>>> I have read:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>    - Practical Object-Oriented Design in Ruby: I found it amazing, I 
>>>>>    think I understand what is object oriented design after reading this 
>>>>> book.
>>>>>    - Rails Antipatterns: I have found many problems that I did not 
>>>>>    know how to solve better and this book has taught me. 
>>>>>    
>>>>> What do you think it would be the best next book to read? I am 
>>>>> interested in Javascript too, but mainly with Rails. 
>>>>>
>>>>> I have thought about Crafting Rails Applications by Jose Valim 
>>>>>
>>>>> I would appreciate any brief description of the book/s and why you 
>>>>> think it is worth to read ! 
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks for your time!
>>>>>
>>>>> Regards,
>>>>>
>>>>> David
>>>>>
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