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Functional Geekery 28t
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Functional Geeks, Geeking Functionally 3t415h
Functional Geekery Episode 141 - Shriram Krishnamurthi
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode, I talk with Shriram Krishnamurthi. We cover his introduction to functional programming, Racket and #lang, Static vs Dynamic Typing, Bootstrap and Pyret, How to Design Programs, and much, much, more. Our Guest, Shriram Krishnamurthi ShriramKMurthi on Twitter shriram on Github cs.brown.edu/~sk/ Shriram’s University of Brown Page parentheticallyspeaking.org Shriram’s Blog/Essays blog.brownplt.org Brown PLT Blog Announcements Strange Loop 2022 is taking place September 23rd and 24th in St. Louis, Missouri. Visit thestrangeloop.com to keep up to date and to . RacketCon is back in person for its 12th year. Hosted at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, RacketCon will be October 28th-30th. Visit https://con.racket-lang.org/ for more information. Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@1:31] Welcome Shriram Brown University PLT Scheme Family How To Design Program Bootstrap Pyret How Shriram got into programming MIT Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs “From then, it was just like unicorns, and I’ve been in the future ever since.” Dan Friedman story Rice University Matthias Felleisen Matthew Flatt Robby Findler Why Shriram didn’t work with Matthias in Grad School Bob Harper Practical Foundations of Programming Languages Daniel Jackson Alloy Moshe Vardi Dynamic vs. Static Typing and Shriram’s view on Types Pyret as an optional typing experience Haskell Perspectives from a Programmer versus a Verification Person at heart TeJaS: Retrofitting Type Systems for JavaScript Gradual Soundness: Lessons from Static Python “We do not fully understand programmer thought processes.” “What would happen if we tried to crowd-source language design?” “Give people the language they want.” #lang typed/racket Plait language PLAI Retrofitting types systems onto existing dynamic languages Rust Pyret built with types in mind from the beginning “We want you to live in a rich world of expression, not an impoverished world […] of data types you can count on one hand.” How To Design Programs Little Schemer SI as a magic trick “It’s almost like the dual of SI.” “Go ahead and type. Let’s see what you can do.” Making traceability as central as possible Kathi Fisler Data-Centric Introduction to Computing Bootstrap Emmanuel Schanzer Trying to introduce computing to school Using exiting teachers to teach computing in existing disciplines Teaching students by them creating a video game as a way to teach math Kathi Fisler’s presentation at LambdaDays 2021 All of Bootstrap’s programming is purely functional Pyret as a no-research language Focus on the experience “There are teachers that have built up a pedagogy around the use of error messages.” “I’m left-handed, and I sometimes joke it’s [parenthetical syntaxes] the same sort of thing.” Building as a language that runs in the browser for zero hassle WeScheme Tool and Language Building’s relation to Racket “If you were deeply conservative, you wouldn’t be using Racket.” Scribble LaTeX “These are the same people who, if their programming language didn’t give them separate compilation, they would just be up in arms.” Mystery Languages The Curse of Lisp The Bipolar Lisp Programmer “We have lost track of this very foundational fact, that programming is a kind of super-power. It’s the ability to make worlds and to sort-of bend things to our will, that is almost scary.” Roman Numbers #lang Racket is a language as a service FrTime Translated FrTime to JavaScript, resulting in Flapjax “Everything is a language.” RacketCon 2022 Making a pitch for “our ignorance.” As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
01:19:56
Functional Geekery Episode 140 - Katja Mordaunt and Adam Warski
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Katja Mordaunt and Adam Warski. We talk Katja’s and Adam’s introduction to software, being on the LambdaDays 2022 Programme Committee, a peek what being on the Programme Committee looks like, introducing new people to functional programming, and more. Our Guests, Katja Mordaunt and Adam Warksi Katja Mordaunt katjam on: Elm Lang Slack elmcraft.org Incremental Elm Adam Warski adamwarski on Twitter adamw on Github Announcements ElixirConf EU is taking place the 9th and 10th of June, with training running the 6th-8th. For more information and to get your tickets visit https://www.elixirconf.eu/. :clojureD is taking place June 11th in Berlin, . Visit https://clojured.de/ for more information and to submit your proposal. Code BEAM Lite A Coruña is taking place in A Coruña, Spain on the 11th of June. Visit https://www.codebeamcorunha.es to , or to find out more. Lambda Days 2022 has been moved to the 28th and 29th of July in Krakow, Poland. Visit lambdadays.org to keep up to date. Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@2:51] About Katja About Adam How Katja got into software development and Elm Basic Logo Pascal Java Elm How did Katja get into Elm PHP F# Elm as a beginner friendly language Felienne Hermans Code Reading Club React How Adam got into software development and Scala Pascal Scheme OCaml Java JBoss/RedHat SoftwareMill Scala Why Scala Groovy Kotlin Clojure Immutable collections by default Coq Having done Masters Thesis in Category Theory You don’t need any background in category theory to be productive in Scala Jane Street Being on Lambda Days 2022 Programme Committee Covid making things difficult on scheduling The Programme Committee process Reading through submissions Getting a coverage of different languages and experience levels Futhark Nix Rust Balancing the theoretical with practical and fun talks Lambda Days as a hybrid track plans “Meeting John Hughes was pretty cool” Bringing in new people Cats library “Embracing everything is an expression” “Go for tickets that are just about copy” “It’s all about confidence” Eric Normand’s 5 step strategy from Grokking Simplicity Don’t give the names for things to understand what someone understands Where to find Katja Katjam on Elm Slack and Elm discords Elm Lang Slack elmcraft.org Incremental Elm Code Reading Club Where to find Adam adamwarski on Twitter Tapir shelly.dev As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
01:02:19
Functional Geekery Episode 139 - Laura M. Castro
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Laura M. Castro. We talk her introduction to Erlang, Final Project and Ph.D. around Erlang, Research and Teaching using Erlang and Elixir, the Erlang Ecosystem Foundation, Code Beam Lite, Erlang Workshops and more. Our Guest, Laura M. Castro. @lauramcastro on Twitter lauramcastro on Github https://lauramcastro.github.io/ Announcements ElixirConf EU is taking place the 9th and 10th of June, with training running the 6th-8th. For more information and to get your tickets visit https://www.elixirconf.eu/. :clojureD is taking place June 11th in Berlin, . Visit https://clojured.de/ for more information and to submit your proposal. Code BEAM Lite A Coruña is taking place in A Coruña, Spain on the 11th of June. Visit https://www.codebeamcorunha.es to , or to find out more. Lambda Days 2022 has been moved to the 28th and 29th of July in Krakow, Poland. Visit lambdadays.org to keep up to date. Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@2:51] About Laura Universidade da Coruña Erlang during University OCaml Java C Prolog OCaml being completely different, even in second year of University with computers as typewriters Basic Studying Computer Engineering as good profession career track Course on Functional Programming in 4th year First Exposure to Erlang “I was a Lego Kid” “It will do the things I tell it to do” End of Degree Project Writing a Risk Management system in Erlang Modeling policies as processes Pattern Matching Doing Research in the Computer Engineering world Ph.D. on what Functional Programming helped put on the table Dialyzer Seeing what it would be like to work in academia and the research world Delphi “What did functional programming bring to the table?” State in Processes Pattern Matching Recursions “[…] they seem straight forward 20 years later” Matthew Flatt – A Racket Perspective on Research, Education, and Production Keeping research close to industry Teaching Erlang in her Software Architecture course “They’ve never seen really distributed architectures” Automatic Validation and Testing “You specify what you want to test” Proper Deg for Scalability with Erlang and OTP WhatsApp Suffering from the Secrecy of Using Erlang Erlang Ecosystem Foundation Overview of the Erlang Ecosystem Foundation Education Working Group OTP Behaviors Ecto University of Kent Erlang Master Classes; Class 1; Class 2; Class 3 exercism Erlang Camp Erlang and OTP in Action Code BEAM Lite A Coruña Code BEAM Twitter Code BEAM A Coruña Twitter Sponsorships for Code BEAM Lite Erlang Workshops Brujo Benavides Erlang Workshop with Laura and Brujo Hank Rebar 3 Property Based Testing Training Workshop coming soon Telegram As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
01:03:33
Functional Geekery Episode 138 - Aleksander Lisiecki
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Aleksander Lisiecki. We talk his introduction to Erlang, non-standard use cases for Erlang and Elixir, Erlang and Elixir School, and more. Our Guest, Aleksander Lisiecki. @AlekLisiecki on Twitter aleklisi on Github Aleksander’s Email at Erlang Solutions Announcements ElixirConf EU is taking place the 9th and 10th of June, with training running the 6th-8th. For more information and to get your tickets visit https://www.elixirconf.eu/. :clojureD is taking place June 11th in Berlin, . Visit https://clojured.de/ for more information and to submit your proposal. Lambda Days 2022 has been moved to the 28th and 29th of July in Krakow, Poland. Visit lambdadays.org to keep up to date. Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@2:44] About Aleksander Lambda Days Erlang Elixir Haskell Software background coming into University Java C++ Taking a class on Ada and Erlang Piotr Matyasik Ariane 5 Getting an Internship in Erlang Erlang Solutions School of Erlang Michal Slaski Peer Stritzinger GRiSP boards Aleksander’s School of Erlang repos on Github Fall of 2020 Fall of 2019 April 2022 Things appealing about Erlang Tooling for inspecting and observing the system Kubernetes Erlang Application Concurrency and Parallelism in Erlang Common Roadblocks to Understanding Erlang and Elixir Prolog like syntax Tooling Rebar3 Gradualizer Gradient Processes in the BEAM Spawnfest Aleksander’s post on Spawnfest Neo4j Other interesting projects in Erlang and Elixir Aleksander has done The Sound of Erlang Undertone Duncan McGreggor’s presentation on Undertone Raspberry Pi Zero W Building a coal stove refill monitor application Firebase Murphy’s Law Aleksander’s talk at Lambda Days Lambda Days 2022 Joanna Wrona Slightly non-standard use cases for Erlang Web Scraping Monte Carlo Simulations ElixirConf EU 2022 As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
53:01
Functional Geekery Episode 137 - Renzo Borgatti
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Renzo Borgatti. We talk his introduction to Clojure, learning the extended vocabulary of Clojure, his book Clojure: The Essential Reference, gems in the Clojure language, side projects, and much more. Our Guest, Renzo Borgatti. @reborg on Twitter reborg on Github https://reborg.net/ Clojure: The Essential Reference from Manning Announcements ElixirConf EU is taking place the 9th and 10th of June, with training running the 6th-8th. For more information and to get your tickets visit https://www.elixirconf.eu/. :clojureD is taking place June 11th in Berlin, . Visit https://clojured.de/ for more information and to submit your proposal. Lambda Days 2022 has been moved to the 28th and 29th of July in Krakow, Poland. Visit lambdadays.org to keep up to date. Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Discount Code Use code podgeekery20 to save 40% off your order at Manning.com Topics [@2:44] Welcome Renzo About Renzo Java Fermilab Ruby on Rails Objective C Clojure InfoQ Clojure Koans What kind of foundation looking at Ruby from Java set for Clojure Landing on Clojure too late to chat freely with Rich Hickey on IRC Components as a way for dependency injection Common Functional ideas Renzo wound up adopting before leaving Java Understanding the idioms of Clojure and the effect they have on code Learning how to organize larger codebases Limitations of working with a restricted vocabulary “Being curious about what else was there and I was not using” Reading Clojure source code Refreshing one-self by looking at Clojure source code Clojure: The Essential Reference from Manning What Hidden Gems found when writing the book fnil juxt Combinators Swap combinator Scheme “Understanding what does it mean to be a Lisp” Actor Model Continuations Project Loom Project Loom Proposal Other insights from working on the book Software Transaction Memory “It made me realize how deep, and how thought out, the implementation in Clojure is” Clojure for the Brave and the True Clojure Programming Other things Renzo is involved with parallel Wishing for an “Audible for [Technical] Papers” Out of the Tar Pit Papers We Love presentations re:Clojure Takeaways from re:Clojure Clojurians Podcast Virtual conference benefits Hybrid conferences as an interesting experiment to give best of both worlds Lambda Days Elixir Conf EU Erlang Solutions Code Sync Code Mesh Tower of Interpreters Stratified Design JUXT The new Clojure “iteration” function blog post Prolog Datalog Expert Systems As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
01:05:08
Episode 136 - Yehonathan Sharvit
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Yehonathan Sharvit. We talk his book Data Oriented Programming, what Data Oriented Programming is, how it differs from Functional Programming, how DOP fits with typed languages, and more. Our Guest, Yehonathan Sharvit @viebel on Twitter viebel on Github https://blog.klipse.tech/ Data Oriented Programming from Manning Announcements The Big Elixir is taking place March 24th and 25th in New Orleans. Save 20% on tickets you use the code FUNCTIONALGEEKERY2022. Visit https://thebigelixir.com/ to . ElixirConf EU is taking place the 9th and 10th of June, with training running the 6th-8th. For more information and to get your tickets visit https://www.elixirconf.eu/. :clojureD is taking place June 11th in Berlin, . Visit https://clojured.de/ for more information and to submit your proposal. Lambda Days 2022 has been moved to the 28th and 29th of July in Krakow, Poland. Visit lambdadays.org to keep up to date. Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@3:22] Welcome Yehonathan About Yehonathan How Yehonathan discovered Clojure C++ Java JavaScript Russell’s Paradox Lisp as an implementation of Lambda Calculus SI lectures Seeing a colleague writing Clojure Stack Overflow Starting to work in Clojure Working on a web scraper Using Clojure for a start-up Ruby on Rails for back-end and ClojureScript for front-end Clojure being very straightforward for junior developers How Clojure influenced their approach to Ruby on Rails Trying to find out the JavaScript code ClojureScript emitted Klipse Inventing/discovering theories of programming “[Clojure] It’s a language that teaches itself” Knowing when theories are true Why the book was written as a discussion. Insights from reading Clojure language source What Data Oriented Programming is Data Oriented Programming from Manning The Joy of Clojure “How we represent information” Why generic maps are better than strong static types for when the code runs Names compile away “That is a tragedy.” Elm TypeScript “My hope is that people stay in their programming language and find the best way to work” Malli clojure.spec Haskell JSON Schema Christoph Grand Conway’s Game of Life in Clojure Principles of Data Oriented Programming: Data is a first class citizen Separate Data from Code Use Generic Data Structures Keep Data Immutable “How can you do state management [with immutable data]?” “Immutable data is the best way to manage state!” Grokking Simplicity Data Driven Programming vs Data Oriented Programming Data that exists before you write your program Distinction between three data related programming paradigms Swagger “It is better to have 100 functions operate on one data structure than to have 10 functions operate on 10 data structures.” GraphQL Star Wars GraphQL queries Rigidity of types in GraphQL “What do we do in of tooling?” Daughter going into National Service and looking for a place to volunteer Open Source project is like volunteering “Somehow it gets back to you” Grit Shared Humanity A refresh of Klipse Sharing snippets of code Available for Training on Data Oriented Programming As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
01:13:36
Episode 135 - Jordan Miller
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Jordan Miller. We talk her breaking into to software development, activity in the Clojure community, redefining open source contributions, mentoring, and much more. Our Guest, Jordan Miller. Jordan Miller Announcements The Big Elixir is taking place March 24th and 25th in New Orleans. Save 20% on tickets you use the code FUNCTIONALGEEKERY2022. Visit https://thebigelixir.com/ to . ElixirConf EU is taking place the 9th and 10th of June, with training running the 6th-8th. For more information and to get your tickets visit https://www.elixirconf.eu/. :clojureD is taking place June 11th in Berlin, . The Call for Presentations is open through March 4th. Visit https://clojured.de/ for more information and to submit your proposal. Lambda Days 2022 has been moved to the 28th and 29th of July in Krakow, Poland. Visit lambdadays.org to keep up to date. Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@2:58] Welcome Jordan Clojurians Slack Jordan on the Cognicast About Jordan Starting on WordPress Learning Lambda Calculus as an introduction to programming Scheme DrRacket Python Clojure Conj ClojureScript re-frame Building a WordPress site for a restaurant website Using Dog Tags to visualize linked lists Falling in love with the Clojure Community Sean Corfield Learning Scheme Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs LightTable 5 different ways to show a function Starting with immutable data Why so many senior devs seem to come to Clojure MIT Open Courseware Original Sussman and Ableson Lectures Dr. Ana Bell What about Clojure that put it on her radar Dave Beasley Jordan’s experience in Python Coursera courses “I struggled with for loops because I learned recursion first” Having your personal webpage Diving right into ClojureScript for first job Self teaching and breaking into software development with a full-time job Daniel Higginbotham Vouch Mike Fikes David Nolen JavaScript React Native Storybook How Jordan started her media presence “I am a performer by nature” “WTF is Clojure?” video on YouTube Being a Sponsored open Source developer Bring the flavor of your Encourage people to redefine what an open source contribution is ClojureBridge What prompted her podcast Borkdude Emergent Works Her mentee Jordan Jay on Github Website Next Chapter Alex Miller “I’ll Fire Spin for a free ticket” Jordan’s LinkTree As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
01:03:15
Episode 134 - Claude Rubinson
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Claude Rubinson. We talk his experience learning and using functional programming as a sociologist, organizing software groups, and more. Our Guest, Claude Rubinson. Claude Rubinson Houston Functional Programmers website Houston Functional Programmers on Twitter OCaml Café on Twitter Announcements :clojureD is taking place June 11th in Berlin, . The Call for Presentations is open through March 4th. Visit https://clojured.de/ for more information and to submit your proposal. Lambda Days 2022 has been moved to the 28th and 29th of July in Krakow, Poland. Visit lambdadays.org to keep up to date. Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@2:01] Welcome Claude About Claude Being a Sociology Professor and being on a functional programming podcast How Claude got interested in Functional Programming Unix Python Lisp Larry Wall “Learn a functional programming language for good measure” Reading books and listening to podcast Trying to understand the philosophy of functional programming Houston Functional Programming Group Claude’s previous background with software University of Georgia Compensation Survey going full-in on the internet Active Server Pages SQL The Dot-Com bust Linux Berkeley Unix s Group O’Reilly Press “sed & awk” book LaTeX [R]()https://www.r-project.org/ University of Arizona Charles Ragin Qualitative Comparative Analysis Boolean Algebra and Set Theory Tuscon Free Unix Group Having to write own version of software for Linux University of Houston Downtown Houston Python Meetup What made Functional Programming attractive for next re-write “You don’t really understand recursion” Modeling Data in a SQL Database Using Programming Language to impose rigor on thinking Algebraic Data Types Immutable Data Gene Kim’s “Love Letter to Clojure” The Biggest Problem in Functional Programming Having to pick things up really quickly Was lucky to be able to take the time to absorb ideas OCaml Getting Up and Running with an OCaml project “This is hard, it is going to take some time, and that is okay.” Eric Normand’s perspective on explaining as “Data, Calculation, and Actions” Elm Telling a story of the problem before selling the solution Functional Programming for taming complexity and scalability Picking a “Functional Forward” or “Functional First” language JavaScript What Claude appreciated the Functional Programming community Haskell Qt High Signal to Noise ratio Generous and kind community know a number of languages, so can provide comparisons between languages How Claude uses Type Systems Tcl/Tk Ousterhout’s Dichotomy Using the type system to think through reasoning “How to do QCA well” Using Type Signatures (without code) to map the process “Understanding the Ontology of Measurement” Writing good clean functions that stand on their own “Working in OCaml to understand how to do QCA and how to do it well” Houston Functional Programming Group Likely sticking to Hybrid Format Always looking for speakers “Introduction to” gets more people showing up Encourage people to give presentations (even if short ones) OCaml Café Call for stability from Programming Language Designers and Library maintainers As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
01:12:50
Functional Geekery Episode 133 - James Stelly
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with James Stelly. We talk his explorations of programming languages and how that led to his book Racket Programming the Fun Way.\r\n\n\n\n\nOur Guest, James Stelly.\n\n\n\nAnnouncements\n\n\n\nNo Starch Press has offered listeners a 30% discount on Racket Programming the Fun Way until the end of the year with discount code GEEKERY30.\r\n\n\n\n\nSome of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page.\r\n\n\n\n\nIf that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery.\r\n\n\n\n\nTopics [@1:10]\n\n\n\nWelcome James\r\nAbout James\r\nFortran\r\nC++\r\nMVS (Multiple Virtual Storage)\r\nFOCUS\r\nNOMAD\r\nAccess\r\nSql Server\r\nForth\r\nPython\r\nJ\r\nC#\r\nJavaScript\r\nScheme\r\nRacket\r\nLaTeX\r\nJames’ first exposure to a functional programming language\r\nF#\r\nPipeline operator (|>)\r\nStill having access to the rest of .NET ecosystem\r\nHaskell\r\nJames’ takeaways from playing with Haskell\r\nTyped Racket\r\nWhat drew James to Racket\r\nBroad tool changes\r\nInteractivity of Racket\r\nRacket Programming the Fun Way\r\nWriting the book as a way to learn Racket\r\nRacket being a “Swiss Army Knife”\r\nProlog and Logic Programming\r\nPossibility of expanding Automata Theory using macros\r\nRelationship to Racket\r\nBuilding a CNC machine\r\nG-Code\r\nGrbl\r\nArduino\r\nHow has playing with different language feed back into “day work”\r\nVisual Basic\r\nWhat was exciting ing Racket for the problems in the book\r\nLogic Programming\r\nSearch Algorithms\r\nWhy Racket\r\n“Most mileage out of and can do a lot of different things”\r\nDr. Racket environment\r\nHover over variable and see arrows showing usage\r\nWhat is the target audience of the book\r\nMatthew Flatt as the technical reviewer\r\n“Given everything in the book, that is just the tip of the iceberg of what you can do with Racket”\r\n\n\n\n\nAs always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.\r\n\n
42:43
Functional Geekery Episode 132 - Duncan McGreggor
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Duncan McGreggor. We talk his introduction to functional programming; Erlang; Lisp Flavoured Erlang; Lisps, Lisps, and more Lisps; and much, much, more. Our Guest, Duncan McGreggor @oubiwann on Twitter Conference Announcements Code Mesh is going virtual! Taking place November 5th and 6th, will run virtually across US and European time zones. Find out more and at https://codemesh.io. Lambda Days 2021 will be a virtual event spread over several days in February 2021. Visit https://www.lambdadays.org/lambdadays2021 to keep up to date as more information is announced. If you have a conference related to functional programming, me, and I will be happy to announce it. Announcements Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@2:03] Welcome Duncan About Duncan M Kaypro II Rewriting BASIC games Duncan’s first exposure to functional programming Conflation of State and Behavior in Object Oriented Programming Deeply nested for loops Python LISP Common LISP Distributed Computing Twisted Python Erlang YAWS exposé on Slashdot Lisp Flavoured Erlang Robert Virding Learning Erlang through LFE Getting started in LFE “Common LISP had a much worse story than Erlang ever did” Common LISP HyperSpec Ruby Rust “Treating Erlang like LISP’s original M-Expressions“ What are Core SBCL Chez Scheme Clojure LFE Joys – Small, lightweight chunks of functionality that are distributed across arbitrary computing resources. Not super picky about tech in the job anymore Enjoy the projects after work to aspire to craftsmanship level Going Away Card software project for CTO Go How functional programming folds in to Duncan’s mentoring junior co-workers Haskell Having the clarity of thought that comes with functional programming “At some level we are all working with distributed systems” Teaching basics of Erlang: supervision trees, restart strategies, monitoring/linking processes Reid Draper of Functional Geekery “Last Write Wins conflict strategy” Enterprise Integration Patterns Deg for Scalability with Erlang/OTP How does LISP come in when mentoring team-mates “I love parenthesis” and the order of operations Low utilization of Macros Write them all the time when learning though ltest ITA Software using LISP Reader Macros Muddle Casting SPELs in LFE Casting SPELs in LISP Language Laboratory level Racket LFE Machine Manual Treasures lost in time from looking at other LISP Machine Manuals The People working to preserve the history Kent Pittman CADR machine MACLISP ARPA MIT, Stanford, and Berkeley Maxima Zeta Lisp Xerox PARC Integrating LFE and Clojure clojang jiface Some other projects on Duncan’s radar Porting The Sound of Erlang to LFE Clojure Overtone SuperCollider “LFE Chineual” Having a bare metal install of LFE on a Raspberry Pi Looking at different boards to run the BEAM on X11 and XORG tv Actively testing LFE 2.0 lfe.io LFE on Slack “Follow your bliss” As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
01:03:43
Functional Geekery Episode 131 – Martin J. Logan
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Martin J. Logan. We talk his experience in CTO roles guiding organizations through functional programming transformations, from lessons learned, tips, tools, strategies, how the grassroots level can help, and much more. Our Guest, Martin J. Logan @martinjlogan on Twitter Discount Code from Manning Reminder that as part of last episode Manning has offered listeners of the podcast a permanent 40% discount code, good for any of their products, in all formats. Use code podgeekery20 for your 40% discount. Conference Announcements Elm Conf is going virtual! Taking place July 15th-17th in your home. The Call for Talks is open and early bird registration has started. Find out more at https://2020.elm-conf.com. If you have a conference related to functional programming, me, and I will be happy to announce it. Announcements Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@1:40] Welcome Martin Erlware Martin on Episode 13 Erlang Camp Lambda Jam 2014 – Design and architecture for actors [Deg for Actor Based Systems blog post)[http://blog.erlware.org/deg-for-actor-based-systems/] Being a CTO and bringing functional programming into organizations Guaranteed Rate William Hill A first attempt on .NET with F# Next attempt using Clojure “My bet was that there are more smart and talented individuals that want to learn functional programming then there are companies smart or brave enough to give it a try” Opening up the organization to be more polyglot Wanting at least one Anchor to teach and mentor the group Why Clojure was good Being on the JVM. “We’re doing Java […] its basically Java, it runs with Java, it interoperates with Java” Lessons learned from the F# going into Clojure Commitment of investing through the slowdown to get faster What helps at at the grassroots to help with a transformation Participation, Mentoring, Someone willing to help work through exercises with people Real projects to work on How to think about limiting the talent pool on the bet for being a functional programming shop How big of a community are you really looking to build Being exciting enough to get people from Cognitect working who worked on Clojure Training and seeding teams Having the light bulb go off and not wanting to leave and have to go back to other languages Small team (4-6 people) with single anchor for about 6 months to build a team Allowing those team to go out to seed new teams The fear moves away and people want to learn Clojure ClojureScript being pulled into the front-end browser flows Clojure University Importance of the Install Party to get a high quality development environment setup Clojure Essentials Functional Programming patterns similar to Object Oriented Patterns Doing it again at William Hill with Scala Avoiding the same bad habits in Java Scala community being steeped in Category Theory “Scala will expose you everything you get out of Haskell on the JVM” Streams in Scala Helping to make the ground more fertile for a functional transformation Pointing at other successful organizations Languages on the JVM help Helping find an anchor Working to make it really successful Focus on the business value and minimize the risks “Don’t make it just a learning project but a delivery project as well” As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
41:56
Functional Geekery Episode 130 – Ivan ?uki?
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Ivan ?uki?. We talk his introduction to functional programming, adopting Scala, his book “Functional Programming in C++”, the C++ communities adoption of functional programming, and much more. Our Guest, Ivan ?uki? @ivan_cukic on Twitter https://cukic.co/ Functional Programming in C++ Ivan’s Projects Discount Code from Manning As part of this episode Manning has offered listeners of the podcast a permanent 40% discount code, good for any of their products, in all formats. Use code podgeekery20 for your 40% discount. Conference Announcements Elm Conf is going virtual! Taking place July 15th-17th in your home. The Call for Talks is open and early bird registration has started. Find out more at https://2020.elm-conf.com. If you have a conference related to functional programming, me, and I will be happy to announce it. Announcements Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@1:40] About Ivan Functional Programming in C++ How Ivan was first exposed to Functional Programming Being taught LISP Working in Java Being a big event when Java introduced forEach Haskell “Multi-threaded and shorter to write” Seeing annotations of a Java program on what would be equivalent in Haskell Haskell as the background noise in his life Picking Scala when going back to the JVM Adopting Scala Transitioning from a “better Java” to a “worse Haskell” Akka Erlang Akka and influence to any OOP style that might have still existed C++ Ranges library What it means to be a Functional Programming Language STL “C++ has always been a functional language” Eric Normand’s Clojure Mid-Cities Group presentation Timing of the C++ community’s evolution to functional programming with Ivan’s use of functional C++ Cute Giving a talk about asynchronous programming with Monads Sean Parent – C++ Seasoning Deciding to write a book on functional programming in C++ The target audience of Functional Programming in C++ “I don’t see what functional programming in here, it’s just common sense” Strengths of C++ with functional programming Lambdas in C++ Having control over everything Simulating Linear Types in C++ easily vs needing compiler in Haskell Where the sane defaults in C++ fit with Functional Programming immer library for immutable data structures Clojure Topics in the book for people not familiar with C++ “Like all Monad tutorials I claim that mine works and none of the others do” IO Monad being useless in C++ Ivan’s view of Rust as a C++ Developer D “All the serious projects use the unsafe features of the language” What Ivan would love to see the C++ community adopt What is exciting Ivan currently Bitmap Vector Trie or Ideal Hash Trees General Recommendations “Stay Safe” “Investigate the beautiful world of open source and free software” As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
54:38
Functional Geekery Episode 129 – Eric Normand
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Eric Normand. We talk his podcast “Thoughts on Functional Programming”; his in-progress book “Grokking Simplicity”; Actions, Calculations, and Data; trying to bury mutation and side-effects; Property-Based testing; and more. Our Guest, Eric Normand @ericnormand on Twitter PurelyFunctional.tv LispCast.com Thoughts on Functional Programming Grokking Simplicity Conference Announcements Lambda Days 2020 will be on the 13th and 14th of February in Kraków, Poland. Visit https://www.lambdadays.org/lambdadays2020 to find out more and to . Code BEAM SF is taking place on March 6th and 6th. For more information visit: https://codesync.global/conferences/code-beam-sf/. Elm in the Spring will be taking place May 1st. Check in at https://www.elminthespring.org/ to keep updated as more information gets announced. If you have a conference related to functional programming, me, and I will be happy to announce it. Announcements Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@2:32] Welcome back Eric What Eric has been up to since Episode 117 PurelyFunctional.tv Grokking Simplicity What prompted the Thoughts on Functional Programming podcast Started from Eric’stalk at Lambdup 2017 Being told it is much easier to edit existing text than write new text Trying to start a literature around functional programming Figuring out the format/layout of the book “Just imagine each page as a slide” The target audience for the book “Functional programming is programming without side effects” Not being able to recommend any books on getting started with functional programming Actions, Calculations, and Data Actions (Impure “Function”) – Depend on when, or how many times, they are run Side-effects also being the reason we write programs Calculations (Pure “Functions”) – Same arguments, same answer no matter how many times you run it Data – completely inert Data can be interpreted in multiple ways Other side of Data is that it requires at least some interpretation How to help distinguish Actions from Calculations Haskell‘s IO type containing all side-effects as brilliant The illusion that we are not doing any mutability at the machine level Blurry line between Actions and Calculations in some cases Any conventions for later readers to hint at Actions vs Calculations Selling the separation of Calculations from Actions Spending time on showing how Actions “contaminate” Calculations The idea that “You could abstract away the mutation” Thinking you are going to bury and covering up the problem “Can you construct a from an ID without hitting the database” Needing mocks as a possible signal of being an Action instead of a Calculation PurelyFunctional.tv videos Thoughts on Functional Programming podcast Property-Based Testing videos Beginning Property-Based Testing course Intermediate Property-Based Testing course Advanced Property-Based Testing course Property-Based testing QuickCheck Next course likely building a web-app in Clojure Bag of Tricks for Property-Based testing Developing for Stateful Systems Model-based Property testing Taking a Stateful test to a Parallel test to a Distributed Test TSSIMPLICITY discount code for 50% off As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
57:37
Functional Geekery Episode 128 – Gene Kim
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Gene Kim. We talk his introduction to Clojure and functional programming, The Phoenix Project and The Unicorn Project, Functional Architecture, lessons learned, his Love Letter to Clojure, and much, much, more. Our Guest, Gene Kim @realgenekim on Twitter realgenekim on LinkedIn Conference Announcements Lambda Days 2020 will be on the 13th and 14th of February in Kraków, Poland. Visit https://www.lambdadays.org/lambdadays2020 to find out more and to . Code BEAM SF is taking place on March 6th and 6th. For more information visit: https://codesync.global/conferences/code-beam-sf/. Elm in the Spring will be taking place May 1st. Check in at https://www.elminthespring.org/ to keep updated as more information gets announced. If you have a conference related to functional programming, me, and I will be happy to announce it. Announcements Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@2:51] About Gene Tripwire State of DevOps Report The Phoenix Project The DevOps Handbook The Unicorn Project Clojure Love Letter to Clojure (Part 1) Ops being where the saves were made Gene Spafford Morris worm 90% of his errors go away when using Clojure What put Clojure on his list to pick up Ruby Reference Manual How Ruby strings aren’t immutable Reading a Clojure book and bolting upright in bed finding out that Ruby’s << operator modifies the right hand side array Java Concurrency in Practice Eiffel Object Oriented Software Construction Smalltalk Immutability and Value Object in Object Oriented style Working in the REPL in Clojure Writing a vacation notifier for Gmail Rewrites note taking and tweeting app a number of times Objective C TypeScript and React Clojure and re-frame Data is immutable, but the program is very mutable Flow by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi Flow, the secret to happiness Ted Talk Peak by Anders Ericsson Deliberate Practice Grit by Angela Duckworth Have a coach; Do practice Podcasts David Koontz on Functional Geekery LambdaCast Functional Design in Clojure podcast JavaScript tooling environment Cats library Haskell How has Clojure refreshed Gene’s thinking when going back to older programs Maxine in The Unicorn Project Micheal Nygard How did the scenes resonate to Proctor RamdaJs Brian Lonsdorf on Functional Geekery David Chambers covering Ramda on Functional Geekery Seeing the shape of the data Some form of a combination of map, filter, reduce “Is it good to think with” Sapir-Whorf hypothesis: Language affects worldview of the speakers Eric Normand on thinking in types based off experience in Haskell Grokking Simplicity Actions, Calculation, Data Simon Peyton Jones on Functional Geekery Dr. John Launchbury Creating Word-Cloud from bibliography and replacing “Ibid.” problem “What are the types of input and output?” “What is the correct answer when you have just one element ‘Ibid.’?” clojure.spec How much did Functional Programming and data-focus opting to write The Unicorn Project Studying Rich Hickey videos Rich Hickey’s 2015 JavaOne presentation Lunch Factor: How many people do we need to take out to lunch to get something done? “How do you get data where it resides […] to where developers can use it in their daily work” Kafka Event Sourcing Self Identifying as a Developer after 25 years Gene’s current view on Functional Architecture Scott Havens (of Jet.com and Walmart.com) presentation on turning 23 API calls to 2 API calls Scott Havens’ talk about rebuilding Kafka servers F# The 5 Ideals: Locality and Simplicity Focus, Flow, and Joy Improvement of daily work Psychological Safety Customer Focus Project Oxygen at Google Core vs Context Excepts of the first 60% of The Unicorn Project First 8 chapters as Audiobook format Fernando Cornago – Adidas talk on data availability across the organization Clojure Conj Gene’s presentation at Clojure Conj As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
54:00
Functional Geekery Episode 127 – Katie Hughes
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Katie Hughes. We talk her introduction to software development, exposure to functional programming, orienting herself in a new codebase, “learning to trust again”, and much more. Our Guest, Katie Hughes @glitteringkatie on Twitter http://glitteringkatie.com/ Conference Announcements Summer BOB 2019 is taking place August 21st in Berlin, . Visit https://bobkonf.de/2019-summer/ for registration and more information. elm-conf 2019 is September 12th in St. Louis, Missouri. Visit https://2019.elm-conf.com/ to find out more and to . OPEN FSHARP 2019 is taking place in the heart of San Francisco, on the 25th – 27th of September. Visit https://www.openfsharp.org/ to and find out more. Lambda Days 2020 just announced their CFP! Go to their website and submit a talk for a chance to present your work on their stage in February. https://www.lambdadays.org/lambdadays2020#call-for-papers If you have a conference related to functional programming, me, and I will be happy to announce it. Announcements Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@2:50] About Katie NoRedInk React AppNexus Elm Pascal Oregon State Exposure to functional programming via Internship Lodash Programming Language Fundamentals class Haskell Prolog Katie’s Introduction to Elm Redux Learning Elm and Haskell as part of 20% time Learn You A Haskell for Great Good Going through the book in both Haskell and JavaScript Being exposed to some functional programming before the college course How Haskell and Elm in 20% time feed back into React and Redux usage Redux-Saga Currying Taking 20% learnings back to the team Working with people that were interested in functional programming Learning the paradigm Moving to work at NoRedInk Ruby Ruby on Rails Elm in the Spring Katie’s Minor in Cognitive Psychology Cognitive Maps Where the Elm Am I “What Can I Break?” Learning how to trust again using Elm Reading the import statements in Elm Using the Elm compiler to help build a mental map by seeing what breaks Katie’s experience picking up Elixir GenServers Understanding how data flows through the Elixir Services Starting an Elixir Book Club at work Little Elixir and OTP Guide Book Refining strategy of how to break things in Elixir talk at elm-conf Working on project to connect characters in Marvel Universe SquirrelGirl Look into Elm Conferences for first time talkers Tips for writing a good CFP Breaking down the outline early Learning Objectives for the audience Get Programming with Haskell Elm Lang tutorial Elm tutorial as good guide for understanding React and Redux As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
55:58
Functional Geekery Episode 126 – Andy Hunt and Dave Thomas
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Andy Hunt and Dave Thomas. We talk about their 20th Anniversary Edition of The Pragmatic Programmer, what prompted a 20th Anniversary Edition, what has changed and what has stayed the same in the 20 years since, where they see things going based off what they have seen, and much, much more. Our Guests, Andy Hunt and Dave Thomas @PragmaticAndy on Twitter https://toolshed.com/ Andy’s Now Page @pragdave on Twitter https://pragdave.me/ Conference Announcements Lambda Days 2020 just announced their CFP! Go to their website and submit a talk for a chance to present your work on their stage in February. https://www.lambdadays.org/lambdadays2020#call-for-papers If you have a conference related to functional programming, me, and I will be happy to announce it. Announcements Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@1:14] Welcome Andy and Dave The Pragmatic Programmer The Pragmatic Programmer 20th Anniversary Edition What prompted a 20th Anniversary Update/Re-write Han Shoots First DRY – Don’t Repeat Yourself Updating the level between the last two sections of the book Book-ending the 20th Anniversary edition with call to responsibility Pragmatic Bookshelf Addison Wesley / Pearson Being rooted in agility Disconnect between source and primary artifact Harry Potter Applying principles from software to working in publishing Going with Easiest Way vs Investing in Conscience The Pragmatic Programmer standing the test of time “Brush your teeth kind of advise” Common Sense and deliberately trying new things “Don’t really trust yourself either” “Take small steps and try stuff Finding “Trust but ” origin Following the Seed of Curiosity The 5 Whys Asking “What are the appropriate practices?” instead of “What are the best practices?” What trends look to be more sticky going forward Picking languages to use and reference in the book How to choose a language to learn “If you don’t understand it, if it confuses you, if it makes you uncomfortable, then that’s the language you should learn.” Haskell “Every language has its little unique additions to the world” “You should always have at least three different ways of implementing it try to get some clarity” What things Dave and Andy thought should have been paid more attention to Unit Testing – Don’t write your own framework today Blackboard Systems How Functional Programming plays in with what they have experienced over the last 20 years “Making State Transformation Explicit” Logo/Turtle Graphics “There is no one right way of doing things” Ruby “It would be a big, big mistake for any of your listeners to consider themselves a Functional Programmer” “Your Role is Problem Solver” “How could this code be used against me, against the company, against the ” Responsibility for moral implications and how the Nuremberg defense isn’t and excuse Reducing your dependencies libraries and frameworks The Pragmatic Programmer 20th Anniversary Edition Beta currently available Hardcover in fall Southern Methodist University As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
01:05:42
Functional Geekery Episode 125 – Verónica López
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Verónica López. We talk her background, exposure to Go and Elixir, working with CoreOS and Kubernetes, being a bridge between Kubernetes and the BEAM communities, and more. Our Guest, Verónica López @maria_fibonacci on Twitter Conference Announcements International Conference on Functional Programming 2018 will be taking place September 23 – 29th in St. Louis, MO. For more information, and to visit: https://icfp18.sigplan.org/ StrangeLoop 2018 will be taking place September 27th and 28th, with a pre-conference day on the 26th in St. Louis, MO. To keep updated as details become announced you can find out more at: https://www.thestrangeloop.com/ (eighth RacketCon) will take place September 27th and 28th in St. Louis, Missouri, along side ICFP and Strange Loop. For more information, and to visit https://con.racket-lang.org/. The Big Elixir Conference will be on November 8th and 9th in New Orleans. Visit https://www.thebigelixir.com for more information and to . Code Mesh LDN will be taking place on November 8th and 9th in London. Visit https://codesync.global/conferences/code-mesh-2018/ for more information and to . Lambda Days 2019 will be taking place February 21st and 22nc in Kraków, Poland. For more information and to visit http://www.lambdadays.org/. If you have a conference related to functional programming, me, and I will be happy to announce it. Announcements Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@3:26] About Verónica Red Hat CoreOS Go Java Elixir Python Background as a physicist Translating software from Fortran to Python Working on Android applications Building back-end services and doing UI design as a mobile developer Moving into more back-end development Transition to Go and Elixir Getting creative on limited infrastructure ElixirConf 2017 – My Journey from Go to Elixir Why originally picking Go over Elixir for concurrency Norberto Ortigoza Further exposure to Elixir Translating Elixir and BEAM concepts to Go Phoenix Framework Kubernetes Learning how to fail better CoreOS etcd OpenShift Comparing Elixir and the BEAM to Kubernetes Learning from other languages and toolkits approaches to distributed systems Operator SDK Operators in Kubernetes Being able to use Elixir in an organization as a luxury currently Being a bridge between Kubernetes and Elixir Languages live or die by promotion Importance of having people to learn from As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
01:12:09
Functional Geekery Episode 124 – Sam Guyer and Caleb Helbling
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Sam Guyer and Caleb Helbling. We talk about Juniper, a functional reactive programming language for Arduino programming. Our Guests, Sam Guyer and Caleb Helbling Sam Guyer http://www.calebh.io/ @CalebHelbling on Twitter Conference Announcements Monadic Party, a 5 day Haskell Summer School, will be taking place in Pozna?, Poland the 11th-15th of June. Visit https://monadic.party/ for more information and to . The 2018 Racket Summer School will run July 9th – 13th at the University of Utah, in Salt Lake City, Utah. For more information, and to apply visit https://summer-school.racket-lang.org/2018/. BusConf will take place for the second time from August 2nd to August 4th in , close to Frankfurt. For more information and to visit: http://www.bus-conf.org/. Compose::Melbourne will be taking place Monday August 27th. Visit http://www.composeconference.org/ to keep updated as more details are announced. International Conference on Functional Programming 2018 will be taking place September 23 – 29th in St. Louis, MO. For more information, and to visit: https://icfp18.sigplan.org/ StrangeLoop 2018 will be taking place September 27th and 28th, with a pre-conference day on the 26th in St. Louis, MO. To keep updated as details become announced you can find out more at: https://www.thestrangeloop.com/ (eighth RacketCon) will take place September 27th and 28th in St. Louis, Missouri, along side ICFP and Strange Loop. For more information, and to visit https://con.racket-lang.org/. The Big Elixir Conference will be on November 8th and 9th in New Orleans. Visit https://www.thebigelixir.com for more information and to . If you have a conference related to functional programming, me, and I will be happy to announce it. Announcements Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@5:12] About Sam and Caleb Tufts University Juniper Arduino How Sam and Caleb got into working with Arduinos Juniper Paper Addressable RGB LED strips “There’s smoking coming out if it. Now it’s garbage.” Pain of programming on an Arduino for those not familiar with C++ FastLED library Concurrency and discrete event simulator Signals Going from feeling the pain to creating Juniper Representing a Signal Graph Elm Architecture Maybe Types to represent Signal values Reactive Programming model Data Flow Model Functional Reactive Programming Using polling based model under the covers Signal Graph as a mental model Importance of Higher Order Functions on Signals Writing Signal generation functions in C++ Ability to have multiple Signals propagating at the same time Debouncing button press Where Juniper fits today with an interrupt model Writing Juniper in F# Haskell OCaml Standard ML fparsec Workflow from writing code to loading on an Arduino C++ Templates Debugging hardware vs software Where Juniper is today Problem with closures in embedded software with limited memory How to get started with Juniper Juniper Google Group Blockspell FastLED Google+ As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
01:03:57
Functional Geekery Episode 123 – Zach Tellman
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Zach Tellman. We talk his introduction to Clojure, how he has noticed Clojure change over the past 10 years, his book Elements of Clojure, and more. Our Guest, Zach Tellman Zach’s website @ztellman on Twitter http://elementsofclojure.com/ Conference Announcements CodeBEAM STO, formerly Erlang Conference, celebrates the 20th Anniversary of Erlang being made Open Sourced, and will be taking place May 31st and June 1st. For more information and to visit https://codesync.global. Monadic Party, a 5 day Haskell Summer School, will be taking place in Pozna?, Poland the 11th-15th of June. Visit https://monadic.party/ for more information and to . The 2018 Racket Summer School will run July 9th – 13th at the University of Utah, in Salt Lake City, Utah. For more information, and to apply visit https://summer-school.racket-lang.org/2018/. BusConf will take place for the second time from August 2nd to August 4th in , close to Frankfurt. For more information and to visit: http://www.bus-conf.org/. Compose::Melbourne will be taking place Monday August 27th. Visit http://www.composeconference.org/ to keep updated as more details are announced. International Conference on Functional Programming 2018 will be taking place September 23 – 29th in St. Louis, MO. For more information, and to visit: https://icfp18.sigplan.org/ StrangeLoop 2018 will be taking place September 27th and 28th, with a pre-conference day on the 26th in St. Louis, MO. To keep updated as details become announced you can find out more at: https://www.thestrangeloop.com/ (eighth RacketCon) will take place September 27th and 28th in St. Louis, Missouri, along side ICFP and Strange Loop. For more information, and to visit https://con.racket-lang.org/. The Big Elixir Conference will be on November 8th and 9th in New Orleans. Visit https://www.thebigelixir.com for more information and to . If you have a conference related to functional programming, me, and I will be happy to announce it. Announcements Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@5:25] About Zach Elements of Clojure C++ OpenGL C# Ruby OCaml Scheme Clojure clojure.pprint LINQ C# Delegates Java F# C++ STL Library Jane Street Early days of Clojure and how it has evolved cake Leiningen Ability to plant a flag in the Clojure eco-system Ring aleph Lessons from when to wrap something in Clojure vs just inter-op with the Java library “Clojure as the connective tissue” The Joy of Clojure Programming Clojure Clojure Programming Wizard hat and special incantations Zach’s overview of Elements of Clojure Strunk and White’s The Element of Style Being stymied when trying to answer “Why is your way better than mine?” First Chapter on Naming Russell Quine Frege “Clojure being used as a lens to understand the fundamental questions of software” Elements of Software What it means to think about thinking about software Proof of Correctness of Data Representations by C A R Hoare “Have we created a representation of a problem that is valuable given what we are trying to do” Haskell Idris Church Numerals Cons-Cells As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
01:03:07
Functional Geekery Episode 122 – Brian Troutwine
Episodio en Functional Geekery
In this episode I talk with Brian Troutwine. We catch up with his work in Erlang, working in Rust, applying functional programming techniques to Rust, learning Erlang compared to Rust, his book “Concurrent Rust” that is in the works, and much more. Our Guest, Brian Troutwine https://blog.troutwine.us/ @bltroutwine on Twitter Conference Announcements CodeBEAM STO, formerly Erlang Conference, celebrates the 20th Anniversary of Erlang being made Open Sourced, and will be taking place May 31st and June 1st. For more information and to visit https://codesync.global. Monadic Party, a 5 day Haskell Summer School, will be taking place in Pozna?, Poland the 11th-15th of June. Visit https://monadic.party/ for more information and to . International Conference on Functional Programming 2018 will be taking place September 23 – 29th in St. Louis, MO. For more information, and to visit: https://icfp18.sigplan.org/ StrangeLoop 2018 will be taking place September 27th and 28th, with a pre-conference day on the 26th in St. Louis, MO. To keep updated as details become announced you can find out more at: https://www.thestrangeloop.com/ If you have a conference related to functional programming, me, and I will be happy to announce it. Announcements Some of you have asked how you can Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page. If that is one of the ways you would like to show your , you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery. Topics [@3:15] About Brian What Brian has been up to in the past few years Mostly Erlang Erlang Rust The Charming Genius of the Apollo Guidance Computer AdRoll Postmates C++ Cernen Hopper Quantiles If Brian was spoiled by working on a system with 1M TPS Knight Capital Group Cautionary Tale Property Testing Beginner’s Luck RackSpace Software being able to inspect itself SmallCheck Chaos Engineering How Brian was introduced to Erlang Joe Armstrong’s thesis paper Prolog OpenMP SML Constructivist approach to programming Idris Agda Coq Working in Erlang professionally at RackSpace Bringing others up to speed with Erlang Mochi Elixir Programming Erlang Erlang and OTP in Action Learn You Some Erlang Difference in Erlang/Elixir approachability since Brian started learning it “I’ve never known an easier time to learn Erlang [and Elixir] than we have right now” Similarity in Brian’s learning Erlang to learning Rust Rust The Book Tokio The ML family typed inspire side of Rust How much does functional ideas fit into Rust in practice Thinking in Erlang as sequential inside of a process which is concurrent Applying a similar approach in Rust What is meant by “Safety” in Rust Using C++ at AdRoll vs how Brian uses Rust today Traits in Rust Working on a book on Concurrency in Rust Rust Concurrency Andrew Stone on Actor System in Rust at CodeMesh How Rust approaches concurrency at a language level What does saying “Rust is Memory Safe” mean? Atomic Reference Counter (ARC) Crates.io Rayon Crossbeam CodeMesh 2018 in London Deg for Scalability with Erlang/OTP Programming Rust from O’Reilly Rust in Action from Manning ripgrep quickcheck Rust in WebAssembly D Andrew Stone’s work at VMWare As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.
01:11:33
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