Example project to go with my Webpack article
-
Updated
Feb 17, 2017 - Ruby
ECMAScript is the standardization of the family of scripting languages that includes JavaScript. New versions of the standard are released every year. It is standardized by Ecma International. ECMAScript is commonly used for client-side scripting on the World Wide Web, and it is increasingly being used to write server-side applications and services using Node.js and other runtime environments. The ECMAScript language includes structured, dynamic, functional, and prototype-based features.
Example project to go with my Webpack article
This is a simple web app that shows has a virtual menu for restaurants which is easier to read and is better than the pdf most restaurants use
A rails plugin gem which includes useful JavaScript classes for React.js with Rails.
This is a React frontend app with a rails backend. The React app utilizes thunk, react router and ES6 syntax.
A Twitter API client
A simple chat web app as my playground for Rails and React, overly engineered for fun and learning.
The Greeting App is a simple web application built to demonstrate the implementation of a connection between a Ruby on Rails back-end and a React front-end. It generates random greetings and serves as a learning tool for understanding the integration between these two technologies.
A small web app for fish people
A single page multiplayer card game application in which players compete over one or multiple rounds. Full Stack project, Rails API with complex polymorphic relationships, SQLite3 database in development, PostgreSQL in production. Frontend written in modern ES6 JavaScript. MVC Architecture. Integrated third party JavaScript library and plugins t…
JavaScript frontend and Ruby on Rails backend application that allows users to add products to the database that they want to be reviewed. Reviews can also be added to the products.
The Greeting App is a simple web application built to demonstrate the implementation of a connection between a Ruby on Rails back-end and a React front-end. It generates random greetings and serves as a learning tool for understanding the integration between these two technologies.
Created by Brendan Eich, Ecma International
Released June 1997