Ruby Programming Training Classes in Eau Claire, Wisconsin

Learn Ruby Programming in Eau Claire, Wisconsin and surrounding areas via our hands-on, expert led courses. All of our classes either are offered on an onsite, online or public instructor led basis. Here is a list of our current Ruby Programming related training offerings in Eau Claire, Wisconsin: Ruby Programming Training
Ruby Programming Training Catalog
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9 February, 2026 - 11 February, 2026 - RED HAT ENTERPRISE LINUX SYSTEMS ADMIN II
29 June, 2026 - 2 July, 2026 - KUBERNETES ADMINISTRATION
23 February, 2026 - 25 February, 2026 - AWS Certified Machine Learning: Specialty (MLS-C01)
2 March, 2026 - 6 March, 2026 - Linux Fundamentals
23 March, 2026 - 27 March, 2026 - See our complete public course listing
Blog Entries publications that: entertain, make you think, offer insight
Studying a functional programming language is a good way to discover new approaches to problems and different ways of thinking. Although functional programming has much in common with logic and imperative programming, it uses unique abstractions and a different toolset for solving problems. Likewise, many current mainstream languages are beginning to pick up and integrate various techniques and features from functional programming.
Many authorities feel that Haskell is a great introductory language for learning functional programming. However, there are various other possibilities, including Scheme, F#, Scala, Clojure, Erlang and others.
Haskell is widely recognized as a beautiful, concise and high-performing programming language. It is statically typed and supports various cool features that augment language expressivity, including currying and pattern matching. In addition to monads, the language support a type-class system based on methods; this enables higher encapsulation and abstraction. Advanced Haskell will require learning about combinators, lambda calculus and category theory. Haskell allows programmers to create extremely elegant solutions.
Scheme is another good learning language -- it has an extensive history in academia and a vast body of instructional documents. Based on the oldest functional language -- Lisp -- Scheme is actually very small and elegant. Studying Scheme will allow the programmer to master iteration and recursion, lambda functions and first-class functions, closures, and bottom-up design.
Supported by Microsoft and growing in popularity, F# is a multi-paradigm, functional-first programming language that derives from ML and incorporates features from numerous languages, including OCaml, Scala, Haskell and Erlang. F# is described as a functional language that also supports object-oriented and imperative techniques. It is a .NET family member. F# allows the programmer to create succinct, type-safe, expressive and efficient solutions. It excels at parallel I/O and parallel CPU programming, data-oriented programming, and algorithmic development.
Scala is a general-purpose programming and scripting language that is both functional and object-oriented. It has strong static types and supports numerous functional language techniques such as pattern matching, lazy evaluation, currying, algebraic types, immutability and tail recursion. Scala -- from "scalable language" -- enables coders to write extremely concise source code. The code is compiled into Java bytecode and executes on the ubiquitous JVM (Java virtual machine).
Like Scala, Clojure also runs on the Java virtual machine. Because it is based on Lisp, it treats code like data and supports macros. Clojure's immutability features and time-progression constructs enable the creation of robust multithreaded programs.
Erlang is a highly concurrent language and runtime. Initially created by Ericsson to enable real-time, fault-tolerant, distributed applications, Erlang code can be altered without halting the system. The language has a functional subset with single assignment, dynamic typing, and eager evaluation. Erlang has powerful explicit support for concurrent processes.
Like me, I believe most people go about their business never to give a serious thought about their assumed private correspondence when using Gmail to email friends, colleagues and business associates. As it turns out, your daily banter may not be so private after all. A recent article in Fortune Magazine, “Judge Rejects Google Deal Over Email Scanning” caught my attention and an immediate thought dominated my curiosity…Google email and scanning scam.
In essence, the article describes Googles’ agreement to change the way it scans incoming messages so that it no longer reads emails while they are in transit, but only when they are in someone's inbox! So, what exactly does that mean? Judge Koh, a San Francisco federal judge, said she's not so sure about that. Her ruling claims the settlement does not provide an adequate technical explanation of Google's workaround, which involves scanning in-transit emails for security purposes, and then later parsing them for advertising data. The judge also proposed a legal settlement to pay $2.2 million to lawyers, but nothing to consumers.
My interest in this story is not so much about the proposed settlements or the specific details about how Google or any of the web giants settle claims based on vague legal language. It is however, more about the naiveté of myself and perhaps many others that never question how the email scanning process really works. I wonder, do most of us really care that Gmail uses contents of our mail to display targeted ads?
The interpreted programming language Python has surged in popularity in recent years. Long beloved by system administrators and others who had good use for the way it made routine tasks easy to automate, it has gained traction in other sectors as well. In particular, it has become one of the most-used tools in the discipline of numerical computing and analysis. Being put to use for such heavy lifting has endowed the language with a great selection of powerful libraries and other tools that make it even more flexible. One upshot of this development has been that sophisticated business analysts have also come to see the language as a valuable tool for those own data analysis needs.
Greatly appreciated for its simplicity and elegance of syntax, Python makes an excellent first programming language for previously non-technical people. Many business analysts, in fact, have had success growing their skill sets in this way thanks to the language's tractability. Long beloved by specialized data scientists, the iPython interactive computing environment has also attracted great attention within the business analyst’s community. Its instant feedback and visualization options have made it easy for many analysts to become skilled Python programmers while doing valuable work along the way.
Using iPython and appropriate notebooks for it, for example, business analysts can easily make interactive use of such tools as cohort analysis and pivot tables. iPython makes it easy to benefit from real-time, interactive researches which produce immediately visible results, including charts and graphs suitable for use in other contexts. Through becoming familiar with this powerful interactive application, business analysts are also exposing themselves in a natural and productive way to the Python programming language itself.
Gaining proficiency with this language opens up further possibilities. While interactive analytic techniques are of great use to many business analysts, being able to create fully functioning, independent programs is of similar value. Becoming comfortable with Python allows analysts to tackle and plumb even larger data sets than would be possible through an interactive approach, as results can be allowed to accumulate over hours and days of processing time.
This ability can sometime allow business analysts to address the so-called "Big Data" questions that can otherwise seem the sole province of specialized data scientists. More important than this higher level of independence, perhaps, is the fact that this increased facility with data analysis and handling allows analysts to communicate more effectively with such stakeholders. Through learning a programming language which allows them to begin making independent inroads into such areas, business analysts gain a better perspective on these specialized domains, and this allows them to function as even more effective intermediaries.
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Since its foundation, HSG has been a leader in Business Rule Management Systems Training and Consulting services by way of the Blaze Advisor Rule Engine. Over the years we have provided such services to many of the worlds largest corporations and government institutions whose respective backgrounds include credit card processing, banking, insurance, health and medicine and more, much more. Such training and consulting services have included:
Create a wrapper object model in either Java, .NET or XML
Identify and catalog business rules
Develop a rule architecture within Blaze Advisor that isolates rule repositories as they relate to functionality and corporate policies
Configure, develop and implement a variety of interfaces to the rule engine from disparate systems ranging from mainframe applications written in Cobol to UNIX/Windows applications using Enterprise Java Beans, Windows Services, Web Services, Fat Clients, Java Messaging Services and Web Applications.
Review and update code to boost efficiency either by way of
Removing functions calls within conditional statements
Ensuring that database calls are essential or can be rearchitected in some other manner
Employing the rete algorithm where necessary
Paring down extensively large class models
Deploying such appliations in multi-threaded systems
· ...
Call us if you:
are in need of Blaze Advisor Expertise
are developing SMEs in Blaze
want to speak directly with an expert (no placement agencies)
want an affordable alternative to FICO
want to work with an industry leader
Tech Life in Wisconsin
| Company Name | City | Industry | Secondary Industry |
|---|---|---|---|
| We Energies | Milwaukee | Energy and Utilities | Gas and Electric Utilities |
| Bemis Company, Inc. | Neenah | Manufacturing | Plastics and Rubber Manufacturing |
| Regal Beloit Corporation | Beloit | Manufacturing | Tools, Hardware and Light Machinery |
| Manitowoc Company, Inc | Manitowoc | Manufacturing | Heavy Machinery |
| Briggs and Stratton Corporation | Milwaukee | Manufacturing | Tools, Hardware and Light Machinery |
| Mortgage Guaranty Insurance Corporation (MGIC) | Milwaukee | Financial Services | Lending and Mortgage |
| A.O. Smith Corporation | Milwaukee | Manufacturing | Tools, Hardware and Light Machinery |
| Sentry Insurance | Stevens Point | Financial Services | Insurance and Risk Management |
| Rockwell Automation, Inc. | Milwaukee | Manufacturing | Tools, Hardware and Light Machinery |
| Bucyrus International, Inc. | South Milwaukee | Manufacturing | Heavy Machinery |
| Diversey, Inc. | Sturtevant | Manufacturing | Chemicals and Petrochemicals |
| Alliant Energy Corporation | Madison | Energy and Utilities | Gas and Electric Utilities |
| Plexus Corp. | Neenah | Manufacturing | Manufacturing Other |
| Spectrum Brands Holdings, Inc. | Madison | Manufacturing | Tools, Hardware and Light Machinery |
| Kohl's Corporation | Menomonee Falls | Retail | Department Stores |
| Snap-on Tools, Inc. | Kenosha | Manufacturing | Tools, Hardware and Light Machinery |
| Fiserv, Inc. | Brookfield | Software and Internet | Data Analytics, Management and Storage |
| CUNA Mutual Group | Madison | Financial Services | Insurance and Risk Management |
| Oshkosh Corporation | Oshkosh | Manufacturing | Heavy Machinery |
| Modine Manufacturing Company | Racine | Manufacturing | Manufacturing Other |
| Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company | Milwaukee | Financial Services | Insurance and Risk Management |
| Joy Global Inc. | Milwaukee | Manufacturing | Heavy Machinery |
| Harley-Davidson, Inc. | Milwaukee | Manufacturing | Automobiles, Boats and Motor Vehicles |
| American Family Insurance | Madison | Financial Services | Insurance and Risk Management |
| Johnson Controls, Inc. | Milwaukee | Manufacturing | Heavy Machinery |
| ManpowerGroup | Milwaukee | Business Services | HR and Recruiting Services |
training details locations, tags and why hsg
The Hartmann Software Group understands these issues and addresses them and others during any training engagement. Although no IT educational institution can guarantee career or application development success, HSG can get you closer to your goals at a far faster rate than self paced learning and, arguably, than the competition. Here are the reasons why we are so successful at teaching:
- Learn from the experts.
- We have provided software development and other IT related training to many major corporations in Wisconsin since 2002.
- Our educators have years of consulting and training experience; moreover, we require each trainer to have cross-discipline expertise i.e. be Java and .NET experts so that you get a broad understanding of how industry wide experts work and think.
- Discover tips and tricks about Ruby Programming programming
- Get your questions answered by easy to follow, organized Ruby Programming experts
- Get up to speed with vital Ruby Programming programming tools
- Save on travel expenses by learning right from your desk or home office. Enroll in an online instructor led class. Nearly all of our classes are offered in this way.
- Prepare to hit the ground running for a new job or a new position
- See the big picture and have the instructor fill in the gaps
- We teach with sophisticated learning tools and provide excellent supporting course material
- Books and course material are provided in advance
- Get a book of your choice from the HSG Store as a gift from us when you register for a class
- Gain a lot of practical skills in a short amount of time
- We teach what we know…software
- We care…














