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Inhoud geleverd door Christoph Neumann and Nate Jones, Christoph Neumann, and Nate Jones. Alle podcastinhoud, inclusief afleveringen, afbeeldingen en podcastbeschrijvingen, wordt rechtstreeks geüpload en geleverd door Christoph Neumann and Nate Jones, Christoph Neumann, and Nate Jones of hun podcastplatformpartner. Als u denkt dat iemand uw auteursrechtelijk beschermde werk zonder uw toestemming gebruikt, kunt u het hier beschreven proces https://nl.player.fm/legal volgen.
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Ep 099: REPL Your World

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Manage episode 384166908 series 2463849
Inhoud geleverd door Christoph Neumann and Nate Jones, Christoph Neumann, and Nate Jones. Alle podcastinhoud, inclusief afleveringen, afbeeldingen en podcastbeschrijvingen, wordt rechtstreeks geüpload en geleverd door Christoph Neumann and Nate Jones, Christoph Neumann, and Nate Jones of hun podcastplatformpartner. Als u denkt dat iemand uw auteursrechtelijk beschermde werk zonder uw toestemming gebruikt, kunt u het hier beschreven proces https://nl.player.fm/legal volgen.

Each week, we discuss a different topic about Clojure and functional programming.

If you have a question or topic you'd like us to discuss, tweet @clojuredesign, send an email to feedback@clojuredesign.club, or join the #clojuredesign-podcast channel on the Clojurians Slack.

This week, the topic is: "taking the REPL beyond your application". We free our REPL to explore and automate the world around us.

Our discussion includes:

  • What are the different ways of working with the REPL?
  • How can you be more productive by using the REPL?
  • What is the connected editor?
  • How to use the REPL beside writing code for your application.
  • What is often missing from API docs.
  • Moving from bash to Clojure.
  • Using the REPL for exploration.
  • What is a "fiddle" approach to using the REPL? What is it good for?
  • Why should you use your editor for non-coding activities?
  • How to save time when you're stuck with manual testing.
  • Interacting with databases.
  • When is the REPL better than a script?
  • How a REPL is like a bash prompt, and how it's not.
  • What supports the supporting activities of software development?
  • Using the REPL as your application interface.
  • Migrating data using the REPL.
  • Why your REPL is a natural place for difficult to access resources.
  • Why the REPL saves you from extra coding.

Selected quotes:

  • "We share because we care."
  • "The connected editor is an interface to productivity."
  • "I like to call it whiplash-driven development because it's so fast that you literally have no time between when you write the code to when you execute it. You're just blown back by the productivity!"
  • "This is a Clojure Podcast, so I bet you know where this is going."
  • "The REPL as a window into another system."
  • "I actually wrote the API, so I know how it should behave...but not how it does!"
  • "Isn't that one of the goals of your programming language and experience: to spend less time doing the things that are really mundane and repetitive and more time actually doing new things?"
  • "I don't want to just let that go into the history file. I want to save it someplace more important."
  • "I have all of the power of Clojure before the query and then after the query. I don't have to trick psql to write that data out somewhere so I can read it in my REPL. It's already there!"
  • "It's not that there aren't other ways to do this. That's not the point. The point is that all of a sudden you realize there's a lot of interactive exploration and processing and task automation you can do from the REPL because you don't need to write a script to do it."
  • "You can just execute a form, and boom! It's off. It's running."
  • "But then, I was like 'Wait, there's got to be a better way!' You know, infomercial style."
  • "It's functional programming, so we're going to talk about composition. It'll happen."
  • "Whoa! The REPL could be a terminal! A super powerful terminal into a vast warehouse of data, and I can slice it and dice it all sorts of different ways and discover things."
  • "The REPL is just a way of doing structured execution very rapidly and very flexibly."
  • "With the REPL, every function or form is a potential entry point. You can have all kinds of entry points."
  • "The malleability of it is its power."

Links:

  continue reading

118 afleveringen

Artwork

Ep 099: REPL Your World

Functional Design in Clojure

90 subscribers

published

iconDelen
 
Manage episode 384166908 series 2463849
Inhoud geleverd door Christoph Neumann and Nate Jones, Christoph Neumann, and Nate Jones. Alle podcastinhoud, inclusief afleveringen, afbeeldingen en podcastbeschrijvingen, wordt rechtstreeks geüpload en geleverd door Christoph Neumann and Nate Jones, Christoph Neumann, and Nate Jones of hun podcastplatformpartner. Als u denkt dat iemand uw auteursrechtelijk beschermde werk zonder uw toestemming gebruikt, kunt u het hier beschreven proces https://nl.player.fm/legal volgen.

Each week, we discuss a different topic about Clojure and functional programming.

If you have a question or topic you'd like us to discuss, tweet @clojuredesign, send an email to feedback@clojuredesign.club, or join the #clojuredesign-podcast channel on the Clojurians Slack.

This week, the topic is: "taking the REPL beyond your application". We free our REPL to explore and automate the world around us.

Our discussion includes:

  • What are the different ways of working with the REPL?
  • How can you be more productive by using the REPL?
  • What is the connected editor?
  • How to use the REPL beside writing code for your application.
  • What is often missing from API docs.
  • Moving from bash to Clojure.
  • Using the REPL for exploration.
  • What is a "fiddle" approach to using the REPL? What is it good for?
  • Why should you use your editor for non-coding activities?
  • How to save time when you're stuck with manual testing.
  • Interacting with databases.
  • When is the REPL better than a script?
  • How a REPL is like a bash prompt, and how it's not.
  • What supports the supporting activities of software development?
  • Using the REPL as your application interface.
  • Migrating data using the REPL.
  • Why your REPL is a natural place for difficult to access resources.
  • Why the REPL saves you from extra coding.

Selected quotes:

  • "We share because we care."
  • "The connected editor is an interface to productivity."
  • "I like to call it whiplash-driven development because it's so fast that you literally have no time between when you write the code to when you execute it. You're just blown back by the productivity!"
  • "This is a Clojure Podcast, so I bet you know where this is going."
  • "The REPL as a window into another system."
  • "I actually wrote the API, so I know how it should behave...but not how it does!"
  • "Isn't that one of the goals of your programming language and experience: to spend less time doing the things that are really mundane and repetitive and more time actually doing new things?"
  • "I don't want to just let that go into the history file. I want to save it someplace more important."
  • "I have all of the power of Clojure before the query and then after the query. I don't have to trick psql to write that data out somewhere so I can read it in my REPL. It's already there!"
  • "It's not that there aren't other ways to do this. That's not the point. The point is that all of a sudden you realize there's a lot of interactive exploration and processing and task automation you can do from the REPL because you don't need to write a script to do it."
  • "You can just execute a form, and boom! It's off. It's running."
  • "But then, I was like 'Wait, there's got to be a better way!' You know, infomercial style."
  • "It's functional programming, so we're going to talk about composition. It'll happen."
  • "Whoa! The REPL could be a terminal! A super powerful terminal into a vast warehouse of data, and I can slice it and dice it all sorts of different ways and discover things."
  • "The REPL is just a way of doing structured execution very rapidly and very flexibly."
  • "With the REPL, every function or form is a potential entry point. You can have all kinds of entry points."
  • "The malleability of it is its power."

Links:

  continue reading

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