Created by Christopher Manning
(ns clj-gunzip.core | |
(:require [clojure.java.io :as io]) | |
(:require [clojure.string :as str]) | |
(:import java.util.zip.GZIPInputStream | |
java.util.zip.GZIPOutputStream)) | |
(defn gunzip | |
"Writes the contents of input to output, decompressed. | |
input: something which can be opened by io/input-stream. |
license: gpl-3.0 | |
redirect: https://observablehq.com/@mbostock/rotating-voronoi |
(ns n01se.externs-for-cljs | |
(:require [clojure.java.io :as io] | |
[cljs.compiler :as comp] | |
[cljs.analyzer :as ana])) | |
(defn read-file [file] | |
(let [eof (Object.)] | |
(with-open [stream (clojure.lang.LineNumberingPushbackReader. (io/reader file))] | |
(vec (take-while #(not= % eof) | |
(repeatedly #(read stream false eof))))))) |
# Oona Räisänen 2013 | |
# http://windytan.com | |
# ssh-keygen -l -f ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub | perl emoji.pl | |
@emoji = qw( 🌀 🌂 🌅 🌈 🌙 🌞 🌟 🌠 🌰 🌱 🌲 🌳 🌴 🌵 🌷 🌸 | |
🌹 🌺 🌻 🌼 🌽 🌾 🌿 🍀 🍁 🍂 🍃 🍄 🍅 🍆 🍇 🍈 | |
🍉 🍊 🍋 🍌 🍍 🍎 🍏 🍐 🍑 🍒 🍓 🍔 🍕 🍖 🍗 🍘 | |
🍜 🍝 🍞 🍟 🍠 🍡 🍢 🍣 🍤 🍥 🍦 🍧 🍨 🍩 🍪 🍫 | |
🍬 🍭 🍮 🍯 🍰 🍱 🍲 🍳 🍴 🍵 🍶 🍷 🍸 🍹 🍺 🍻 |
(by @andrestaltz)
If you prefer to watch video tutorials with live-coding, then check out this series I recorded with the same contents as in this article: Egghead.io - Introduction to Reactive Programming.
Inspired by "Parsing CSS with Parsec".
Just quick notes and code that you can play with in REPL.
By @kachayev
Kris Nuttycombe asks:
I genuinely wish I understood the appeal of unityped languages better. Can someone who really knows both well-typed and unityped explain?
I think the terms well-typed and unityped are a bit of question-begging here (you might as well say good-typed versus bad-typed), so instead I will say statically-typed and dynamically-typed.
I'm going to approach this article using Scala to stand-in for static typing and Python for dynamic typing. I feel like I am credibly proficient both languages: I don't currently write a lot of Python, but I still have affection for the language, and have probably written hundreds of thousands of lines of Python code over the years.
This is a collection of the things I believe about software development. I have worked for years building backend and data processing systems, so read the below within that context.
Agree? Disagree? Feel free to let me know at @JanStette.
Keep it simple, stupid. You ain't gonna need it.