Rails Guides Reviewers
Vijay Dev
Vijayakumar, found as Vijay Dev on the web, is a web applications developer and an open source enthusiast who lives in Chennai, India. He started using Rails in 2009 and began actively contributing to Rails documentation in late 2010. He tweets a lot and also blogs.
Xavier Noria
Xavier Noria has been into Ruby on Rails since 2005. He is a Rails core team member and enjoys combining his passion for Rails and his past life as a proofreader of math textbooks. Xavier is currently an independent Ruby on Rails consultant. Oh, he also tweets and can be found everywhere as "fxn".
Rails Guides Designers
Jason Zimdars
Jason Zimdars is an experienced creative director and web designer who has lead UI and UX design for numerous websites and web applications. You can see more of his design and writing at Thinkcage.com or follow him on Twitter.
Rails Guides Authors
Ryan Bigg
Ryan Bigg works as a consultant at RubyX and has been working with Rails since 2006. He's co-authoring a book called Rails 3 in Action and he's written many gems which can be seen on his GitHub page and he also tweets prolifically as @ryanbigg.
Frederick Cheung
Frederick Cheung is Chief Wizard at Texperts where he has been using Rails since 2006. He is based in Cambridge (UK) and when not consuming fine ales he blogs at spacevatican.org.
Tore Darell
Tore Darell is an independent developer based in Menton, France who specialises in cruft-free web applications using Ruby, Rails and unobtrusive JavaScript. His home on the internet is his blog Sneaky Abstractions.
Jeff Dean
Jeff Dean is a software engineer with Pivotal Labs.
Mike Gunderloy
Mike Gunderloy is a consultant with ActionRails. He brings 25 years of experience in a variety of languages to bear on his current work with Rails. His near-daily links and other blogging can be found at A Fresh Cup and he twitters too much.
Mikel Lindsaar
Mikel Lindsaar has been working with Rails since 2006 and is the author of the Ruby Mail gem and core contributor (he helped re-write Action Mailer's API). Mikel is the founder of RubyX, has a blog and tweets.
Cássio Marques
Cássio Marques is a Brazilian software developer working with different programming languages such as Ruby, JavaScript, CPP and Java, as an independent consultant. He blogs at /* CODIFICANDO */, which is mainly written in Portuguese, but will soon get a new section for posts with English translation.
James Miller
James Miller is a software developer for JK Tech in San Diego, CA. You can find James on GitHub, Gmail, Twitter, and Freenode as "bensie".
Pratik Naik
Pratik Naik is a Ruby on Rails consultant with ActionRails and also a member of the Rails core team. He maintains a blog at has_many :bugs, :through => :rails and has an active twitter account.
Emilio Tagua
Emilio Tagua —a.k.a. miloops— is an Argentinian entrepreneur, developer, open source contributor and Rails evangelist. Cofounder of Eventioz. He has been using Rails since 2006 and contributing since early 2008. Can be found at gmail, twitter, freenode, everywhere as "miloops".
Heiko Webers
Heiko Webers is the founder of bauland42, a German web application security consulting and development company focused on Ruby on Rails. He blogs at the Ruby on Rails Security Project. After 10 years of desktop application development, Heiko has rarely looked back.
Feedback
You're encouraged to help improve the quality of this guide.
If you see any typos or factual errors you are confident to patch, please clone the rails repository and open a new pull request. You can also ask for commit rights on docrails if you plan to submit several patches. Commits are reviewed, but that happens after you've submitted your contribution. This repository is cross-merged with master periodically.
You may also find incomplete content, or stuff that is not up to date. Please do add any missing documentation for master. Check the Ruby on Rails Guides Guidelines for style and conventions.
If for whatever reason you spot something to fix but cannot patch it yourself, please open an issue.
And last but not least, any kind of discussion regarding Ruby on Rails documentation is very welcome in the rubyonrails-docs mailing list.