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2017-01-29
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- # aws (1)
- # aws-lambda (1)
- # beginners (34)
- # boot (61)
- # cljs-dev (126)
- # cljsjs (10)
- # cljsrn (4)
- # clojure (27)
- # clojure-russia (7)
- # clojure-spec (1)
- # clojure-uk (26)
- # clojurescript (42)
- # cursive (31)
- # datascript (4)
- # datomic (16)
- # hoplon (51)
- # klipse (1)
- # lein-figwheel (1)
- # lumo (79)
- # off-topic (16)
- # om (7)
- # parinfer (5)
- # planck (2)
- # re-frame (6)
- # reagent (3)
- # ring-swagger (5)
- # untangled (11)
I never knew that existed, but wow, I may actually have a use case for that one in awhile.
Could be useful for buffering a complex seq ahead of some IO.
I myself are using Emacs, but I would like to write an intellij IDE plugin with Clojure. Before I get started, has someone tried that already and found out it was a dumb idea? Or might it be feasible?
Probably. What I want to do is very simple, so I thought I might try to go all the way Clojure.
I'm a big fan of Emac's C-h f. Is there a way to get the entireity of the Oracle Java API Docs under C-h f ?
I'd like to use things like helm, org mode, etc ... which I guess means I need to somehow get it as a text format or some other structrured data rather than query cider on the fly
Is there an example out there of non-CRUD RESTful clojure backend? Maybe with CQRS? Or GraphQL? I also wondered if people have used Datomics Pull API like GraphQL.
I’m familiar with this talk https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qDNPQo9UmJA but he doesn’t release his source code
just a scan of the docs (haven't tried), but (t/dayOfMonth (t/date-time 1986 10 14 22))
might work. I'm guessing all the fields from Joda Time are available: http://www.joda.org/joda-time/field.html
@thumbquat Thanks, that looks good 🙂
(require '[clj-time.core :as t])
(def t (t/now))
(t/day t) ; => 29
(t/day-of-week t) ; => 7
Speaking of time, I wrote a little timer application using seesaw and core.async. http://beppu.github.io/post/writing-a-timer-in-clojure/
I have some questions at the end regarding naming that I'd like to get some feedback on from more experienced Clojure programmers.
@vinai It’s tricky, but feel free to drop me a mail (<mailto:[email protected]|[email protected]>)
How would I tell http.async.client
to raise its size limit on incoming websocket packets? I can and will receive some fairly large ones, and the default (8kb? or something?) is simply ridiculously small...
Actually this might be something to do with compression - the packets received are compressed and I'm not sure if there's a different way to handle them? Maybe there's a byte
event or something but I don't see it anywhere.
you'll probably have to dig down into the guts of the underlying library it calls
or wraps
I have a feeling this is going to take me all evening
It's great, 11k is a "small" packet, as far as the API I'm using is concerned 😞