Cannot find RadRails views in Aptana Studio 3 - ruby-on-rails

I cannot see any of the RadRails views in my IDE. For example Rake tasks, rails console, generator view, etc.. See the screenshot for the available view options.
I'm perplexed by the explanations I find on Aptana site and other forums. I cannot find a menu option called "My Aptana" or plug-ins anywhere.
Also, the preferences window does not have the "Ruby" option as expected. See the screenshot.
I have the installed Aptana Studio on Mac (Aptana Studio 3, build: 3.0.1.201104291443) (http://www.aptana.com/products/studio3/download).

Aptana Studio 3 removed a number of the Ruby/Rails specific UI views. We took a "less is more" approach, since keeping the UIs up to date with the evolving ruby/Rails community and across versions proved to be very messy and in many cases the UIs were less productive than just using the command line.
The Rake tasks integration now uses a right-click menu on projects containing Rakefiles.
There are options to launch Rails apps under the server in run or debug mode as well. There's also project wizards for Ruby and Rails, and we have support for YAML, HAML, Ruby, Sass, SCSS, CSS, HTML and ERB files/editors.
For generators we urge users to use the command line inside the IDE (the Terminal view), or outside the IDE.
If there are specific views/functionality that you feel is missing and really needs to be brought back, feel free to add your voice/comments to http://jira.appcelerator.org/browse/APSTUD-2416
Also see http://wiki.appcelerator.org/display/tis/Rails+Development#RailsDevelopment-DeprecatedViewsServers%2CPlugins%2CGems%2CGenerators

I believe Aptana Studio is all built around Rails you can find console under General and you can open a Terminal tab from Aptana folder. It's built a bit differently than RadRails

Related

How do I configure a Rails server in Aptana Studio 3?

I'm using Aptana Studio 3 on Mac High Sierra. I would like to configure a Rails server for my existing Ruby project. I have already imported the Ruby project into my workspace. However, when adding a new server, the drop down list is empty ...
Not sure what else I need to do to add a server configuration. Help is appreciated.
The issue comes from Aptana Studio cannot recognize your project is a Rails project.
Right click on your project in left panel, choose Properties then choose Project Natures on the left side and check Rails on the right side, Apply and close. See my screenshot
Now, you will see your project in the Project dropdown
Anyway, I highly recommend you to use another IDE because Aptana seems to be out-dated. Its last release is more than 1 year ago. Especially for Rails, its support seem to be stopped at Rails 3 because its start script still lookup rails script in script folder instead of bin folder (so, you may also need to copy it from bin to script to be able to start the rails web server)

What about Aptana 3?

I tried aptana few months ago where only the beta version was available.
Unfortunately, I had a lot of problems and for this reason I turn back on NetBeans. Today I noticed that the version 3.0.2 is available but I don't want to make the mistake again, before changing platform, I would like to know by some Aptana's users what they think. Is there valid reasons to change my currently IDE Netbeans passing to Aptana for RoR 3 developing ? What are the features that Aptana offer and Netbeans doesn't has ?
IMHO you will want to use RubyMine. It's by far the most complete Rails IDE and you can really customize it to work the way you want. There is a trial version for 30 days on their site. I am currently using it in conjunction with the VIM bundle and loving it. Netbeans is not supported anymore so you will probably want to move out at one point.

Autocompletion ruby on rails editor for windows

I am looking for an editor/IDE on windows doing autocompletion like eclipse (you start to type and there is a list of possible functions/variables). I tried Netbeans but it does not support network drives, I tried ruby mine, and aptana, but the tab gizmo requires you already know ruby on rails very well to be used.
Is there a Rails editor for windows with autocompletion?
I think JetBrains makes the best IDEs on the market, hands down. Take a look at their Ruby Mine. It's not free, but some things are worth paying for.
Take a look at this thread:
Ruby on Rails Editor for Windows
Aptana RadRails is an extension for eclipse with ruby on rails support and is open source.
RubyMine is also another good editor but it is not free. RubyMine is surely a useful IDE but you might try the open source IDEs first.

Windows Ruby/Rails IDE or editor with autocompletion

I am looking for an IDE with Ruby on Rails autocompletion on windows. Netbeans seems to be ok but he is buggy and the wizard for importing existing project does not work. RubyMine is unable to read files from a network drive (and you must pay for it!).
Is there any Ruby ide autocompleting code with at least the rails API and eventually my project classes?
Take a look at Aptana Studio 3 Beta, that runs on Eclipse. One of it's features, RadRails, provides exhaustive support for both Ruby and Ruby on Rails.
Try e editor. The power of textmate on windows!

What is the best Ruby on Rails environment for a Visual Studio user?

I've been a Visual Studio user since 1997, and used VB 3.0 before that. My whole professional life has been spent inside the Microsoft development environments.
Now I would like to branch out into Ruby on Rails to try something different, and it doesn't have the kind of vendor support that C# does (for very obvious reasons).
For someone coming from the world of Visual Studio, what is the best total environment (IDE, tools, gems, etc) to set up for RoR development on Windows that would make the transition easier?
If you want to stick with Visual Studio, you can always use the Ruby in Steel plugin by Sapphire Steel. The best traditional IDE for Ruby is probably NetBeans, it even has a special stripped-down Ruby Edition.
However, note that unlike less expressive languages like Java, C# or VB.NET, you can not only get by, but even be more productive with a good text editor than with a traditional static IDE. IDEs like NetBeans, Eclipse and Visual Studio are designed with static languages in mind, and trying to force Ruby into that ecosystem is just unnatural.
There is a nice article on The Best Environment for Rails on Windows by Fabio Akita that you might want to read. While I don't agree with everything he writes (mostly because I don't use Rails), it is a pretty good introduction of how you might want to setup a development environment specifically for Rails.
Try JetBrains RubyMine. When installing it, you have the option to set it up to match Visual Studio environment settings. All the short cuts are the same as Visual Studio. It even switches the copy and paste keys from command to control on a Mac. It's a bit expensive considering how many free options there are but in my eyes its worth it.
This thing is so highly customizable it's almost overwhelming.
Netbeans! Its got the most similar features. I developed for years in VS before the switch. It was the only one that I really liked and felt comfortable using.
Netbeans.org
You might find that RadRails (Aptana) is an excellent choice: (http://www.aptana.com/rails) - NOTE: Make sure you look at the Features and Comparisons tab as RadRails has many compelling features. Additionally, I have used Aptana Studio for JQuery development and it help me to be very productive.
I have tried Netbeans and it seemed very promising as well but that is mentioned many times so I thought to offer another approach I was aware of.
Hope this helps!
I use netbeans for two reasons. I like the visual studio style navigation pane and for the debugger.
Be warned though, Netbeans is pretty slow. It doesn't bother me that much because I too am slow.
I also dislike the filename tabs because you can easily be confused about what file you are working on since there is no directory information unless you mouse over the tab.
In 2018? Visual Studio Code! These things always seem to come full circle right?

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