Episode 6: Chris Houser; Clojure surveys; getting the “little things” right in languages; Yegge-rama; ClojureScript REPLs
Posted: August 14, 2012 Filed under: Conversation, Episode 6 CommentsI was stoked to reboot by talking yesterday with Chris Houser (a.k.a. Chouser), this time via Skype. It’s good to be back!
Enjoy!
Listen:
Or, download the mp3 directly.
Discrete Topics
- The 2012 State of Clojure survey results came in recently
- Discussion on the effect of duplicate values in set literals (and duplicate keys in map literals) in Clojure (from ; here’s a link to that I described on twitter as a bit of “software archeology”)
- Clojure’s “pace of development” / cadence and the failure modes of language development
- Potentially customizing the characteristics of thread pools (and more?) used by agents and futures (from )
- Rough corners around agents, multimethods, namespaces, etc., and the potential for alternative implementations of the same
- The podcast has now been anthropomorphized into a Twitter account — tweet your questions, topics, etc. there, and
- Chouser’s precis re: Lonocloud now that he’s been working there for some months
- The sad statuses of Raposo and Longbottom, related to Chas and Chris’ respective talks at Clojure Conjand Clojure/West (link to Chris’ talk pending the release of its video)
- Check out clj-stacktrace, the nexus for all improvements to Clojure stack traces
- Get your in; CFP closes August 24th
- What sucks about Clojure…and why you’ll love it anyway, from Clojure/West
- Engineering(,) A Path to Science: “I don’t want to die in a language I can’t understand”, Richard Gabriel’s talk at Clojure/West (video link not yet available)
- In the aftermath of Steve Yegge’s :
- Recognition of Yegge’s prior good works, e.g. Execution in the Kingdom of the Nouns
- What “Worse is Better vs The Right Thing” is really about, talking about how economic choices influence technology choices
- Using ClojureScript to write CouchDB views, and writing PostgreSQL stored procedures via
- Piggieback, which enables any nREPL-based Clojure tools (e.g. Leiningen, , nrepl.el, REPL-y, etc.) to start up and use a ClojureScript REPL as easily as one can from a Clojure REPL on a command-line terminal.
- nrepl.el is looking like a decent, well-supported alternative to SLIME for Emacs users wanting to use nREPL
- “I’ve been using Linux for a long time, I have low standards!”
Finally, a non sequitur: Chris kindly responded to with this fine example of an indecently-shaven specimen:
[…] was stoked to reboot Mostly Lazy by talking yesterday with Chris Houser (a.k.a. Chouser), this time via Skype. It’s good to be back, so go check out the latest […]
HOORAY!!! You are back, awesome!
Hey, I was waiting for many months for an update on this podcast. Great to see it continues. I’m running to listen to it.
Thanks
Would be great if you could add minutes:seconds to the items listed in “Discrete Topics”, to make it navigate around the audio.
Good idea…although the way I assemble show notes, taking down the timestamp where a particular topic starts isn’t really workable.
If someone wants to compile that info and post it in a comment, that’d be great.
Woohoo! This will tide me over until the conj.
The only tragedy is that I can’t get a word in edgewise!
Thanks Chouser & Chas!