clojurenews.blogspot.com
Clojure News: Clojure in Healthcare
http://clojurenews.blogspot.com/2010/08/clojure-in-healthcare.html
Monday, 2 August 2010. A software developer in a healthcare company recently wrote the following description. Of their use of Clojure from their background with Java:. Even though we do not use Clojure, we have also noticed an increasing number of people referring to the Clojure language and that can only mean one thing! Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Smoke Vector Graphics (OCaml library). Signal Processing .NET (library). Time-frequency analysis (Mathematica library). OCaml for Scientists (book).
clojurenews.blogspot.com
Clojure News: Tail calls on the JVM: work in progress
http://clojurenews.blogspot.com/2009/02/tail-calls-on-jvm-work-in-progress.html
Sunday, 8 February 2009. Tail calls on the JVM: work in progress. The terms proper tail recursion. And tail call elimination. Microsoft's .NET platform is built upon a Common Language Run-time (CLR) that was designed to support a wide variety of programming languages including functional languages and, consequently, the CLR has had tail call elimination for the best part of a decade. There are already several commercial products. That depend upon the correct handling of tail calls in the CLR. On the Open...
clojurenews.blogspot.com
Clojure News: February 2011
http://clojurenews.blogspot.com/2011_02_01_archive.html
Wednesday, 9 February 2011. Clojure enters the UK job market. According to the IT Jobs Watch website. The relatively new Clojure programming language has blasted onto the UK job market scene going from a single job advert a year ago to nine job adverts mentioning Clojure today, continuing to show healthy growth not only in the absolute number of jobs but also in market share (0.015% of all job ads mention Clojure). Remarkably, the most common salary for Clojure jobs is £90,000! Subscribe to: Posts (Atom).
clojurenews.blogspot.com
Clojure News: Clojure enters the UK job market
http://clojurenews.blogspot.com/2011/02/clojure-enters-uk-job-market.html
Wednesday, 9 February 2011. Clojure enters the UK job market. According to the IT Jobs Watch website. The relatively new Clojure programming language has blasted onto the UK job market scene going from a single job advert a year ago to nine job adverts mentioning Clojure today, continuing to show healthy growth not only in the absolute number of jobs but also in market share (0.015% of all job ads mention Clojure). Remarkably, the most common salary for Clojure jobs is £90,000! OCaml for Scientists (book).
scalanews.blogspot.com
Scala News: Martin Odersky's new company ScalaSolutions
http://scalanews.blogspot.com/2010/08/martin-oderskys-new-company.html
Wednesday, August 11, 2010. Martin Odersky's new company ScalaSolutions. The creator of the Scala programming language, Martin Odersky, stated informally at Scala Days 2010. That he intended to create a startup offering commercial Scala support. He also mentioned it in a comment here. Interestingly, a venture capital firm in Switzerland have listed ScalaSolutions. As a new company with VC funding and Martin Odersky as CEO/Chairman that describe themselves as:. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). I have b...
scalanews.blogspot.com
Scala News: First book on Scala just published
http://scalanews.blogspot.com/2007/12/first-book-on-scala-just-published.html
Saturday, December 22, 2007. First book on Scala just published. Just published the first book on the Scala. Programming language called Programming in Scala. Written by the language's creator Martin Odersky. As well as Lex Spoon. Congratulations to the authors and the Scala team for achieving this milestone! Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Visual F# 2010 for Technical Computing (book). The F#.NET Journal (on-line magazine). F# for Visualization (library). The OCaml Journal (on-line magazine). I have...
ocamlnews.blogspot.com
OCaml News: New OpenGL bindings for OCaml
http://ocamlnews.blogspot.com/2007/02/new-opengl-bindings-for-ocaml.html
Putting the fun in functional programming since 2005! Friday, 23 February 2007. New OpenGL bindings for OCaml. I just stumbled upon an exciting new project that revitalises the use of OpenGL from OCaml:. Hopefully this project will catch on and become the basis an even better OpenGL interface for OCaml in the future. Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom). Visual F# 2010 for Technical Computing (book). The F#.NET Journal (on-line magazine). F# for Visualization (library). F# for Numerics (library). Middle-cl...
ocamlnews.blogspot.com
OCaml News: Power Set
http://ocamlnews.blogspot.com/2007/08/power-set.html
Putting the fun in functional programming since 2005! Tuesday, 14 August 2007. The Haskell community are discussing the confusion surrounding Monads on their mailing list at the moment. The example. Of a function to compute the powerset in Haskell using the List monad was given:. GHC Interactive, version 6.6.1, for Haskell 98. Http:/ www.haskell.org/ghc/. Loading package base . linking . done. Prelude :m Control.Monad. Prelude Control.Monad let powerset = filterM (const [True, False]). Powerset [1;2;3];.
ocamlnews.blogspot.com
OCaml News: Which functional language for use with LLVM?
http://ocamlnews.blogspot.com/2012/05/which-functional-language-for-use-with.html
Putting the fun in functional programming since 2005! Sunday, 6 May 2012. Which functional language for use with LLVM? OCaml is the only functional language with bindings in the LLVM distro itself. And documentation on llvm.org such as the Kaleidoscope tutorial. If you have OCaml installed when you build and install LLVM then it will automatically build and install the LLVM bindings for OCaml as well. Moreover, these OCaml bindings have been in use for years. So they are mature and reliable. LLVM tutoria...
ocamlnews.blogspot.com
OCaml News: Recursive descent parsing with OCaml's streams
http://ocamlnews.blogspot.com/2010/02/recursive-descent-parsing-with-ocamls.html
Putting the fun in functional programming since 2005! Sunday, 7 February 2010. Recursive descent parsing with OCaml's streams. Distribution includes a mutable stream type that allows sequences to be dissected efficiently. The camlp4 syntax for OCaml includes support for pattern matching over streams. The following example uses the camlp4 stream-parsing syntax extension to implement a recursive descent parser for a simple calculator:. This program may be compiled and run as follows:. The Haskell community...