- Translate a command line Ruby app to a dynamic web app
- Use the
#write
method in aRack::Response
object to make a dynamic web app in Rack
Making web apps that always give the same response are boring. Programming is fun because of its ability to create dynamic responses that change depending on the input. A dynamic web app in Rack is pretty straightforward. Let's say we wanted to create a simple slots game.
First, let's set up our basic Rack app:
class Application
def call(env)
resp = Rack::Response.new
resp.write "Hello, World"
resp.finish
end
end
Then run it with rackup config.ru
. You should see something like
[2016-07-28 10:09:08] INFO WEBrick 1.3.1
[2016-07-28 10:09:08] INFO ruby 2.3.0 (2015-12-25) [x86_64-darwin15]
[2016-07-28 10:09:08] INFO WEBrick::HTTPServer#start: pid=38967 port=9292
Make note of port=9292
— that shows which port we'll access the application on
in the browser. But what's the host? If we're developing locally, we can just
use localhost
— so in this case we'd visit http://localhost:9292
.
If we're using the IDE, we should also see a line like
Starting server at 104.131.138.76:6868
That is the full URL to use. (Yours will most likely be different!) So in this case, we'd visit http://104.131.138.76:6868 in the browser. If we're using the IDE, localhost will not work.
When we visit the appropriate URL in our browser, we should see "Hello, World". Let's liven things up a bit. The amazing part of Rack and everything (like Rails) that is built on top of Rack is that it's just Ruby. If you were writing a command line slots game generator, you would first need to generate three numbers between 1 and 20. You could do that like this:
NOTE: Don't sweat the Kernel
bit — Kernel
is a module that holds many of Ruby's most useful bits. We're just using it here
to generate some random numbers.
num_1 = Kernel.rand(1..20)
num_2 = Kernel.rand(1..20)
num_3 = Kernel.rand(1..20)
Then, to check to see if you won or not, we'd have an if statement like this:
num_1 = Kernel.rand(1..20)
num_2 = Kernel.rand(1..20)
num_3 = Kernel.rand(1..20)
if num_1==num_2 && num_2==num_3
puts "You Win"
else
puts "You Lose"
end
So how do we now make this application work on the web? Almost none of the code actually is specific to a command line interface. The only parts that require a command line are the two puts
lines. All that needs to change to adapt this for the web is a different way than puts
to express output to our user. Because this is the web, that means adding it to our response. Instead of puts
now we'll use the #write
method in our Rack::Response
object.
Remember that to modify our web server, we have to first exit out of the running server by typing CTRL-C. Then open up your Application and modify it to look like this:
class Application
def call(env)
resp = Rack::Response.new
num_1 = Kernel.rand(1..20)
num_2 = Kernel.rand(1..20)
num_3 = Kernel.rand(1..20)
if num_1==num_2 && num_2==num_3
resp.write "You Win"
else
resp.write "You Lose"
end
resp.finish
end
end
Notice that we only changed the puts
statements into resp.write
statements. That's it! Web servers are just big ruby apps that respond to the user in an HTTP response rather than via puts
statements. Let's give the user a bit more information about what numbers they received by writing the numbers to the response as well. The #write
method can be called many times to build up the full response. The response isn't sent back to the user until #finish
is called.
class Application
def call(env)
resp = Rack::Response.new
num_1 = Kernel.rand(1..20)
num_2 = Kernel.rand(1..20)
num_3 = Kernel.rand(1..20)
resp.write "#{num_1}\n"
resp.write "#{num_2}\n"
resp.write "#{num_3}\n"
if num_1==num_2 && num_2==num_3
resp.write "You Win"
else
resp.write "You Lose"
end
resp.finish
end
end
The \n
s are just a special character which gets rendered by the browser as a new line. Kill your running server with CTRL-C and re-run it and refresh your browser. Feel free to cheat a bit and change the random numbers to just be between one and two. That way you can test that both work.
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