Really glad that you liked it =)
Because there is no guidance/common way of writing business logic on rails, what I've seen so far is that each company does it in a different way.
Using use cases like I described in this blog post is one of them.
btw, I also recommend to check some design patterns in ruby: github.com/davidgf/design-patterns...
it's quite interesting =)
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Really glad that you liked it =)
Because there is no guidance/common way of writing business logic on rails, what I've seen so far is that each company does it in a different way.
Using use cases like I described in this blog post is one of them.
btw, I also recommend to check some design patterns in ruby: github.com/davidgf/design-patterns...
it's quite interesting =)