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Kevin Marshall, Chad Pytel, and Jon Yurek

"Pro Active Record: Databases with Ruby and Rails"

If contributing to the development
of Active Record sounds interesting to you, there are several resources for you to get
started with:
http://groups.google.com/group/rubyonrails-core is the discussion forum for the core
development of Active Record and the rest of the Ruby on Rails framework.
http://rubyforge.org/projects/active record is the location to download the latest
Active Record release, as well as past releases (or you can install via the gem system outlined
in Chapter 1).
http://dev.rubyonrails.org is the main web site for Active Record and Ruby on Rails
development. Hosted within Trac, this site includes documentation for how to check out
the latest version using SVN, as well as the bug and issue database.
As you can probably guess by now, we??™re big fans of Active Record, and we hope that we??™ve
helped to make you a big fan as well. Still, we wouldn??™t feel as if we were being complete, or
totally honest, if we didn??™t acknowledge that Active Record doesn??™t do everything. It??™s not perfect
for every situation, and there are alternatives.


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