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2018-06-19
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@scott.archer are you using https://github.com/emezeske/lein-cljsbuild/blob/master/README.md
Also, did you use a template to initiate your project? They tend to have instructions on how to do a production build (minified) in their readmes.
Just finished. Clojure for the brave and true, and was planning on ordering the Joy of Clojure…Are there any big differences between 1.6 and 1.8 I need ot be aware of?
@patrick.hildreth I don’t believe anything in 1.6 would break in 1.8. It’s mostly new stuff that was added.
1.7 adds transducers and reader conditionals, and 1.8 adds some new string functions and what I’d call “internal improvements” (support for socket servers and direct linking).
leiningen is often slow because it's reloading lots of libraries and "compiling" them at repl-runtime
and slow isn't a problem. too slow is a problem but it is measured. Python is "slow" and there is a huge productive world of "slow" python code out there.
nope. "too slow" is something you measure. do some experiments in both. pick one that is "fast enough"
I look a lot at https://www.techempower.com/benchmarks/ when i can't choose between frameworks
there are lots of great Clojure intro books - sounds like something systematic like that might help you get started
but I’d also recommend Getting Clojure, Living Clojure, Programming Clojure, etc
@suryapjr I love both Elixir and Clojure but you're going to find much more tooling and support in the JVM ecosystem than BEAM. Not that things are not out there, but you're more likely to find an outdated library for elixir or just have to figure a lot of things out on your own. They're both a lot of fun and I recommend learning both but pick up a book or two and start with Clojure. You'll transfer some of that knowledge over and be able to pick up actors on top of elixir.