Hi Gregorious,

I will show you the track that i'm followin to learn Clojure. I'm a 
programmer since 99, so maybe this does not apply for you, but can be a 
good reference:

1- http://blackstag.com/blog.posting?id=5 (for me was a good starting point)
2 - http://java.ociweb.com/mark/clojure/article.html (Some concepts started 
to hurt my brain, but i'm going forward, waiting for the next step)
3 - Clojure Programmin (O'Reilly)
4 - Programming Clojure (The Pragmatic Bookshelf)

Between steps 3 and 4 i will read some tutorial about Noir like the one 
here: http://yogthos.net/blog/22-Noir+tutorial+-+part+1

;)

On Wednesday, September 26, 2012 4:16:53 PM UTC-3, Hobson42 wrote:
>
> On 26/09/2012 20:04, Jim - FooBar(); wrote: 
> > On 26/09/12 17:10, Ian wrote: 
> >> If you want to start with a functional language, then I would start 
> >> with Erlang or Haskell, rather than Closure. 
> >> 
> >> Closure is a great language, but it runs on the Java VM, and you are 
> >> expected to know and understand Java data structures. I found 
> >> learning both Closure and Java together was heavy going because it 
> >> was documented in two places. 
> > 
> > The language is called "Clojure" not "Closure" 
> > sorry for nitpicking but you did it 3 times... :-) 
> > 
> > Jim 
> > 
> Mea culpa. Mea maxima culpa. 
>
>

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