I saw this, very nice.
These days i started with Programming Clojure Book and i'm enjoying :)
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 2:14 PM, Plínio Balduino wrote:
> A nice post by Nikola Peric about this subject with what to read and what
> to avoid.
>
>
> http://deltadata.wordpress.com/2014/04/19/learning-
A nice post by Nikola Peric about this subject with what to read and what
to avoid.
http://deltadata.wordpress.com/2014/04/19/learning-clojure-tutorial-books-and-resources-for-beginners/
Plínio
On Wed, Apr 23, 2014 at 1:27 PM, Cecil Westerhof wrote:
> 2014-04-23 15:05 GMT+02:00 Stefan Kamphaus
2014-04-23 15:05 GMT+02:00 Stefan Kamphausen :
> Would German be an option for you?
>
With what is available, not for me, but maybe for others it would.
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Would German be an option for you?
Just curious
stefan
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first
"Clojure Programming" was the most useful to me when I started with Clojure
(I already had a bit of Lisp experience). Kyle Kingsbury has an online
series going, "Clojure from the Ground Up"
(http://aphyr.com/tags/Clojure-from-the-ground-up). I'm writing a book as
well, "Clojure for the Brave an
I'm about halfway through all of them, and find the back and forth to actually
be helpful. First and foremost though, i recommend you go through the "clojure
koans" video series on YouTube and get started with 4clojure.com (subsequent,
difficult problems will become easier for you as you progres
Let me also +10 for Eric Normand’s excellent Clojure videos, found at
http://www.purelyfunctional.tv
On Apr 22, 2014, at 10:13 PM, Cecil Westerhof wrote:
> 2014-04-22 20:18 GMT+02:00 Cecil Westerhof :
> I have a ‘little’ to learn. ;-) I have worked with a lot of languages,
> including Lisp. I
2014-04-22 20:18 GMT+02:00 Cecil Westerhof :
> I have a ‘little’ to learn. ;-) I have worked with a lot of languages,
> including Lisp. I was thinking about the following books (in that order):
> - Practical Clojure
> - Clojure in Action
> - The Joy of Clojure
> - Clojure Programming
> - Programmi
Hi Cecil
I had read almost all books of you list and without a doubt clojure
programming (o'reilly) is the best book for me ;)
Andrey
2014-04-22 20:18 GMT+02:00 Cecil Westerhof :
> I have a ‘little’ to learn. ;-) I have worked with a lot of languages,
> including Lisp. I was thinking about the
Yeah, JoC is my favorite clojure book, but I agree it's not the best to start
with.
Let me throw a couple others into the mix that haven't been mentioned yet. If
you come from a solid OO background, I highly recommend Brian Marick's book
"Functional Programming For the Object Oriented programm
JoC is like SICP, just really worth doing, not necessarily immediately
practical.
On Tue, Apr 22, 2014 at 3:16 PM, Plínio Balduino wrote:
> Exactly, Thiago.
>
> I just understood Clojure after dive into Clojure. The books helped a lot,
> but alone they are almost useless.
>
> Plínio
>
>
> On Tue
Exactly, Thiago.
I just understood Clojure after dive into Clojure. The books helped a lot,
but alone they are almost useless.
Plínio
On Tue, Apr 22, 2014 at 3:53 PM, Thiago Massa wrote:
> I think you should care about learning the concepts involved in clojure
> and functional programming in
I started with JoC and reading Programming Clojure now. Both give pretty
good introduction to the language and its capabilities. JoC is full of
not-so-simple examples, but they make one's brain work, show the clojure
way, and are good for people how know they way around programming in
general.
Hi
I would recommend to take Programming Clojure or Clojure Programming first,
and after that take the The Joy of Clojure (2ed)...
On Tue, Apr 22, 2014 at 8:18 PM, Cecil Westerhof wrote:
> I have a ‘little’ to learn. ;-) I have worked with a lot of languages,
> including Lisp. I was thinking ab
I think you should care about learning the concepts involved in clojure and
functional programming in general. "Getting" clojure after you have done
some haskell, lisp or erlang is supposed to be a breeze, so you need to get
to the basics!
I bet that most of the books will teach you almost the sam
2014-04-22 20:32 GMT+02:00 Plínio Balduino :
> Some will say that Joy of Clojure is not the best choice for the newcomer.
>
> I read all the books more in your list more than once and had the better
> comprehension with JoC.
> The important thing is that I didn't get Clojure reading the first or
>
Some will say that Joy of Clojure is not the best choice for the newcomer.
I read all the books more in your list more than once and had the better
comprehension with JoC.
The important thing is that I didn't get Clojure reading the first or second
book. I just really understood after read the
I have a ‘little’ to learn. ;-) I have worked with a lot of languages,
including Lisp. I was thinking about the following books (in that order):
- Practical Clojure
- Clojure in Action
- The Joy of Clojure
- Clojure Programming
- Programming Clojure
Someone told me it was better to start with Prog
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