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Showing posts with the label DevCode

Why Your Ruby Scripts Keep Breaking Files (and How to Fix Them)

File Handling in Ruby — Reading, Writing, and What Could Go Wrong File Handling in Ruby — Reading, Writing, and What Could Go Wrong CodeCraft Diaries #9 • For Freshers, Students & Curious Developers “If you’ve never accidentally deleted a file while testing your script, are you even a developer?” Working with files is one of the first real-world things you’ll do in any programming language. Whether it's reading a config, logging errors, or saving user data — file I/O is everywhere. And Ruby? Ruby makes it refreshingly simple. Until you forget to close the file... 💀 📖 Reading from a File Let’s say we have a file called data.txt . File.open("data.txt", "r") do |file| puts file.read end What’s happening here? "r" means “read mode” file.read grabs the entire content The block auto-closes the file (thank you, Ruby!) ✍️ Writing to a File File.open("log....

Meet Ruby’s Secret Siblings: Procs & Lambdas Made Fun

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Procs and Lambdas in Ruby — The Cousins You Need to Know Procs and Lambdas in Ruby — The Cousins You Need to Know Published on June 09, 2025 • CodeCraft Diaries #6 "If methods are the parents and blocks are the kids, then Procs and Lambdas are the cool cousins who show up late but save the day with reusable logic." 🔍 Wait... Blocks Have Relatives? Yes, they do. Blocks are amazing, but sometimes you want to reuse them, store them in variables, or pass them around like a tray of samosas at a tech meetup. That’s where Procs and Lambdas come in — Ruby’s way of giving blocks a full-time job. 👶 Quick Recap: What’s a Block? def greet yield end greet { puts "Hello from the block!" } Blocks are anonymous chunks of code you can pass to methods. But blocks can’t live on their own — Procs and Lambdas can. 🧑‍🤝‍🧑 Meet Proc and Lambda 📦 What is a Proc? A Proc is like a block with a backpack — you can carry ...

This is Ruby. And Ruby knows how to block — like a bouncer for bad code. 🔥

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Ruby Blocks — The Secret Sauce Behind Elegant Code Ruby Blocks — The Secret Sauce Behind Elegant Code Picture this: You're writing Ruby. Things are going well… until you find yourself copying the same chunk of logic again. And again. And… wait, again? 😩 Enter: Ruby Blocks — your new BFF for clean, DRY, and elegant code. If methods are the skeleton of Ruby, blocks are the juicy muscles that flex logic in powerful ways. 🍱 Blocks? Like, Tupperware Blocks? Exactly! Ruby blocks are like code Tupperware — you can pack them with logic, pass them around, and execute them on demand. They're anonymous chunks of code that you can hand over to a method to be called later. 🔍 Syntax: The Two Faces of Ruby Blocks 1. Curly Braces for the Quickies: [1, 2, 3].each { |num| puts num } 2. do...end for Multiline Zen: [1, 2, 3].each do |num| puts "Double trouble: #{num * 2}" end Both are blocks. One's espresso; the other's a cappuccino. ...

Loops in Ruby — Teaching Your Code to Repeat

CodeCraft Diaries #4: Loops in Ruby — Teaching Your Code to Repeat CodeCraft Diaries #4: Loops in Ruby — Teaching Your Code to Repeat "Why did the Ruby developer go in circles? Because they couldn't break the loop!" Welcome back, CodeCrafters! 🎉 In our last adventure, we taught our code to make decisions using control flow. Now, it's time to teach it to repeat tasks efficiently. Let's dive into the world of loops in Ruby! 🔁 The Need for Loops Imagine you want to print "Hello, World!" five times. You could write: puts "Hello, World!" puts "Hello, World!" puts "Hello, World!" puts "Hello, World!" puts "Hello, World!" But that's not efficient. Instead, let's use a loop: 5.times do puts "Hello, World!" end Much better, right? 🌀 Types of Loops in Ruby 1. while Loop Repeats as long as a condition is true. i = 0 while i ...

Variables and Data Types in Ruby — The Real Building Blocks

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  🚀 CodeCraft Diaries #2: Variables and Data Types in Ruby — The Real Building Blocks “Okay, I’ve installed Ruby... now what?” You stare at the terminal. Cursor blinking. Empty file. Welcome to the starting line, my friend. Let’s talk about the first real step in learning any programming language: variables and data types . It’s where code starts remembering stuff, making decisions, and acting like it knows things. 🧠 What’s a Variable? Let me paint a picture. You’ve got a backpack. You drop your snacks into one pocket, your charger in another, and your laptop in the big one. Each pocket = a variable. The stuff inside = the value. In Ruby, you just do this: snack = "Chips" drink = "Coffee" That’s it. No need to declare types or chant any mystical compiler spells. Ruby’s like: “I got you.” 🎨 The Basic Data Types (a.k.a The Stuff You Carry) 1. Strings – Just Text name = "Ruby" You can play with strings like this: puts ...