This page is not created by, affiliated with, or supported by Slack Technologies, Inc.
2017-07-26
Channels
- # bangalore-clj (1)
- # beginners (12)
- # boot (48)
- # cider (56)
- # clara (1)
- # cljs-dev (15)
- # clojure (455)
- # clojure-austin (2)
- # clojure-dev (33)
- # clojure-italy (26)
- # clojure-nl (6)
- # clojure-poland (10)
- # clojure-russia (23)
- # clojure-spec (33)
- # clojure-uk (62)
- # clojurescript (37)
- # code-art (2)
- # cursive (12)
- # datomic (48)
- # funcool (1)
- # juxt (16)
- # leiningen (13)
- # off-topic (12)
- # om (23)
- # onyx (16)
- # other-lisps (5)
- # parinfer (2)
- # pedestal (28)
- # re-frame (60)
- # reagent (8)
- # ring (1)
- # ring-swagger (15)
- # spacemacs (5)
- # specter (53)
- # test-check (2)
- # unrepl (8)
- # vim (14)
... That's a really neat model. Wonder if it'll end up having any useful implications.
why is it that on Google, I can find "racket nanopass frameworks" and "racket nanopass research papers" -- but when I try to find a list of exercises to build an actual racket nanopass compiler, I can't find any
for example: here's a great paper: https://www.cs.indiana.edu/~dyb/pubs/nano-jfp.pdf
http://nanopass.org/ has a framework
Many people refer the java classpath as being an issue or difficult to grok. It was mentioned again in @ericnormand 's last post at https://purelyfunctional.tv/article/clojures-hosted-legacy/ . But it always leaves me wondering what is so different than for example the pythonpath, @INC in perl, the system PATH variable.
If you go to your slack preferences and then go to the sidebar tab there will be acheck box for show all unreads
@spinningtopsofdoom : disabled it; thanks!