Awesome, thanks for the advice.  I need to find something I've written and 
translate it to Clojure...
On Mar 26, 2014, at 7:14 PM, gaz jones <gareth.e.jo...@gmail.com> wrote:

> A technique I use whenever I need to learn a new language is to write the 
> same application I already have in another language.  I generally choose 
> downloading nzbs from usenet as it can involve a number of interesting 
> programming techniques, at least enough to give you a pretty good idea of how 
> a language handles things like:
> 
> * threading and work queues (downloading files concurrently)
> * socket io (writing a simple nntp client)
> * xml processing (parsing nzb files)
> * binary encoding/decoding (yenc implementation)
> * curses style ui
> * web ui
> * command line arguments
> * configuration
> * signal handling
> * testing (haha kidding)
> 
> TBH I usually get about 50% of the way through and have enough of a handle on 
> the language at that point to abandon my efforts and move on.
> 
> On Wed, Mar 26, 2014 at 7:22 PM, Daniel Higginbotham <nonrecurs...@gmail.com> 
> wrote:
> Chiming in a bit late, but here was my path:
> 
> * Read "Land of Lisp" by Conrad Barski. This was my first real contact with 
> lisp and functional programming. I found it challenging, but the book is 
> well-written and the technique of teaching through writing games was perfect 
> for me. It uses common lisp which is almost baroque compared to Clojure, but 
> it was helpful later in getting a better sense of Clojure's roots. Also, most 
> of the classic lisp books out there use common lisp
> * Tried to write my own web-based game using common lisp. This was true fun 
> and I learned a ton
> * Read "On Lisp" by Paul Graham. It is an excellent book
> * Was introduced to Clojure through a talk given by Alan Dipert at my 
> workplace
> * Learned Clojure by skipping around Clojure in Action, Programming Clojure, 
> and Clojure Programming. Settled on Clojure Programming.
> * projecteuler.net has been a good help
> * I've been teaching Clojure to folks at work, which forces me to deeply 
> understand the material
> * At the same time, I've kept building little web apps to solidify my 
> knowledge. One of them, http://gratefulplace.com, is actually used :)
> 
> I feel like I know enough to get stuff done, but there's still so much more 
> to learn. Most recently I've been brushing up on math/logic so that I can 
> better understand the more mathy texts whenever I encounter them.
> 
> 
> On Thursday, March 20, 2014 9:08:41 PM UTC-4, Marcus Blankenship wrote:
> Hi Folks, 
> 
> I'm a post technical PM who's fascinated by Clojure, and want to learn it, 
> but am having a hard time without a "real" project to work on. It's actually 
> excited me so much I'm considering hanging up my PM hat and diving back in 
> the "programmer pool" again! 
> 
> My problem appears to be 1) focus, and 2) fear. Focus because I can't (yet) 
> earn a living on a clojure project, so it must be done during "off hours". 
> Fear because it's harder and more different than the old OO languages I've 
> used in the past. 
> 
> So I'm curious: how did you learn Clojure well enough to be proficient with 
> it, or how are you working on learning it? 
> 
> Anyone else facing the focus + fear dilemma? 
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
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Best,
Marcus

Marcus Blankenship
\\\ Problem Solver, Linear Thinker
\\\ 541.805.2736 \ @justzeros \ skype:marcuscreo

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