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You're reading from  The Clojure Workshop

Product typeBook
Published inJan 2020
Reading LevelBeginner
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781838825485
Edition1st Edition
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Authors (5):
Joseph Fahey
Joseph Fahey
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Joseph Fahey

Joseph Fahey has been a developer for nearly two decades. He got his start in the Digital Humanities in the early 2000s. Ever since then, he has been trying to hone his skills and expand his inventory of techniques. This lead him to Common Lisp and then to Clojure when it was first introduced. As an independent developer, Joseph was able to quickly start using Clojure professionally. These days, Joseph gets to write Clojure for his day job at Empear AB.
Read more about Joseph Fahey

Thomas Haratyk
Thomas Haratyk
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Thomas Haratyk

Thomas Haratyk graduated from Lille University of Science and Technology and has been a professional programmer for nine years. After studying computer science and starting his career in France, he is now working as a consultant in London, helping start-ups develop their products and scale their platforms with Clojure, Ruby, and modern JavaScript.
Read more about Thomas Haratyk

Scott McCaughie
Scott McCaughie
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Scott McCaughie

Scott McCaughie lives near Glasgow, Scotland where he works as a senior Clojure developer for Previse, a Fintech startup aiming to solve the problem of slow payments in the B2B space. Having graduated from Heriot-Watt University, his first 6 years were spent building out Risk and PnL systems for JP Morgan. A fortuitous offer of a role learning and writing Clojure came up and he jumped at the chance. 5 years of coding later and it's the best career decision he's made. In his spare time, Scott is an avid reader, enjoys behavioral psychology and financial independence podcasts, and keeps fit by commuting by bike, running, climbing, hill walking, snowboarding. You get the picture!
Read more about Scott McCaughie

Yehonathan Sharvit
Yehonathan Sharvit
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Yehonathan Sharvit

Yehonathan Sharvit has been a software developer since 2001. He discovered functional programming in 2009. It has profoundly changed his view of programming and his coding style. He loves to share his discoveries and his expertise. He has been giving courses on Clojure and JavaScript since 2016. He holds a master's degree in Mathematics.
Read more about Yehonathan Sharvit

Konrad Szydlo
Konrad Szydlo
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Konrad Szydlo

Konrad Szydlo is a psychology and computing graduate from Bournemouth University. He has worked with Clojure for the last 8 years. Since January 2016, he has worked as a software engineer and team leader at Retailic, responsible for building a website for the biggest royalty program in Poland. Prior to this, he worked as a developer with Sky, developing e-commerce and sports applications, where he used Ruby, Java, and PHP. He is also listed in the Top 75 Datomic developers on GitHub.
Read more about Konrad Szydlo

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Introduction

Ever since the Clojure language was first introduced, its concurrency model has been one of its major selling points. In programming, the word "concurrency" can apply to a lot of different situations. To start with a simple definition, any time your program or your system has more than one simultaneous flow of operations, you are dealing with concurrency. In multithreaded Java programs, that would mean code running simultaneously in separate processor threads. Each processor thread follows its own internal logic, but to work properly your program needs to coordinate the communication between the different threads. Even though JavaScript runtimes are single-threaded, both the browser and Node.js environments have their own ways of dealing with simultaneous logical flows. While the roots of Clojure's concurrency are definitely in Java, some of the ideas and tools apply equally in ClojureScript.

In this chapter, you will learn the basics of concurrent programming...

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The Clojure Workshop
Published in: Jan 2020Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781838825485

Authors (5)

author image
Joseph Fahey

Joseph Fahey has been a developer for nearly two decades. He got his start in the Digital Humanities in the early 2000s. Ever since then, he has been trying to hone his skills and expand his inventory of techniques. This lead him to Common Lisp and then to Clojure when it was first introduced. As an independent developer, Joseph was able to quickly start using Clojure professionally. These days, Joseph gets to write Clojure for his day job at Empear AB.
Read more about Joseph Fahey

author image
Thomas Haratyk

Thomas Haratyk graduated from Lille University of Science and Technology and has been a professional programmer for nine years. After studying computer science and starting his career in France, he is now working as a consultant in London, helping start-ups develop their products and scale their platforms with Clojure, Ruby, and modern JavaScript.
Read more about Thomas Haratyk

author image
Scott McCaughie

Scott McCaughie lives near Glasgow, Scotland where he works as a senior Clojure developer for Previse, a Fintech startup aiming to solve the problem of slow payments in the B2B space. Having graduated from Heriot-Watt University, his first 6 years were spent building out Risk and PnL systems for JP Morgan. A fortuitous offer of a role learning and writing Clojure came up and he jumped at the chance. 5 years of coding later and it's the best career decision he's made. In his spare time, Scott is an avid reader, enjoys behavioral psychology and financial independence podcasts, and keeps fit by commuting by bike, running, climbing, hill walking, snowboarding. You get the picture!
Read more about Scott McCaughie

author image
Yehonathan Sharvit

Yehonathan Sharvit has been a software developer since 2001. He discovered functional programming in 2009. It has profoundly changed his view of programming and his coding style. He loves to share his discoveries and his expertise. He has been giving courses on Clojure and JavaScript since 2016. He holds a master's degree in Mathematics.
Read more about Yehonathan Sharvit

author image
Konrad Szydlo

Konrad Szydlo is a psychology and computing graduate from Bournemouth University. He has worked with Clojure for the last 8 years. Since January 2016, he has worked as a software engineer and team leader at Retailic, responsible for building a website for the biggest royalty program in Poland. Prior to this, he worked as a developer with Sky, developing e-commerce and sports applications, where he used Ruby, Java, and PHP. He is also listed in the Top 75 Datomic developers on GitHub.
Read more about Konrad Szydlo