I did that talk, it was called “Into to Elixir” :D

On Tue, Apr 12, 2016 at 11:08 PM, Will Jessop <[email protected]> wrote:

> I don’t think so? If we did I might have missed it.
>
> > On 12 Apr 2016, at 23:07, Chris Seaton <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > Has NWRUG never had a ‘how to do FP in Ruby' talk?
> >
> > Chris
> >
> >> On 12 Apr 2016, at 22:28, Lee Hambley <[email protected]> wrote:
> >>
> >> Hi Rick,
> >>
> >> Unfortunately I can't attend but I'm far from the only person in my own
> peer group who's tried and failed to become interested in FP because of a
> lack of focus in most textbooks on mundane things such as IO, text and
> string manipulation and the likes.
> >>
> >> Will there be any recording facility to upload a video after the fact?
> >>
> >> (sent from my phone, please excuse typos)
> >>
> >> On 12 Apr 2016 10:51 p.m., "Rick Moynihan" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> >> This Monday (18th April @7pm) the Lambda Lounge is meeting with a
> >> presentation by Hakim Cassimally on how Haskell is an acceptable Perl.
> >>
> >> http://www.lambdalounge.org.uk/
> >>
> >> So, Haskell is "an advanced purely-functional programming language"
> which
> >> supports writing "declarative, statically typed code". It may be
> optimized for
> >> academic buzzwords you've never heard of but... is it any good for
> writing code
> >> in the way that you'd write Perl, Python, or Ruby?
> >>
> >> What are strong types, and why are we so frightened of them anyway? Can
> you
> >> develop interactively in Haskell, the way you would in a dynamic
> language? Does
> >> Haskell have "whipuptitude" (being able to get things done quickly) as
> well as
> >> "manipulexity" (being able to manipulate complex things)? And perhaps
> most
> >> importantly, can writing Haskell be *fun*?
> >>
> >>
> >> Rick.
> >>
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