Community contributed recipes and techniques for the Sinatra Web Framework.
Quite simply, the Sinatra README and Book have become long in the tooth.
This project is to extract any redundant and overlap between the two sources, and create a home for user contributed recipes and documentation to take form.
Got a recipe or tutorial for Sinatra? Awesome, this is the first place you should go if you're looking to contribute.
Once you have forked the project send a pull request, just be sure to follow the styling guidelines.
You can also get a hold of us on irc or the mailinglist.
Don't have any ideas? Check out the existing issue tracker for recipes that have been requested or are in progress.
To get started you should clone the repository from GitHub:
git clone git://github.com/sinatra/sinatra-recipes.git
Now once you cd
into sinatra-recipes
you should see a few things.
First you should take note of the application files:
app.rb # a tiny application for displaying the contributed recipes
config.ru # rackup file for deploying to heroku
Gemfile # dependencies file for bundler to run the app
If you want to run the application yourself first you need the bundler
gem.
gem install bundler
If you are on Rubinius make sure that you have the latest bundler version installed. Versions prior to 1.0.10 won't work.
# then install the application dependencies
bundle install
Once that is complete, you should only need to run rackup
in the application
root and visit: localhost:9292
Since the application just maps the flat files, you can browse either the source or the web app to view recipes.
If you check out the source you will see a few folders listed, in each folder
there is a README.md
that will briefly explain the topic. This can also be
view by going to /p/:topic
where topic
is the folder you wish to view.
In each folder there should be a number of recipes pertaining to each topic.
Currently we're not supporting translations in the main repository.
However, if you'd like to maintain a fork for translating the docs then feel free to do so, and add your fork to the list of translations in the wiki.