Book Image

Mastering Clojure

By : Akhil Wali
Book Image

Mastering Clojure

By: Akhil Wali

Overview of this book

Clojure is a general-purpose language from the Lisp family with an emphasis on functional programming. It has some interesting concepts and features such as immutability, gradual typing, thread-safe concurrency primitives, and macro-based metaprogramming, which makes it a great choice to create modern, performant, and scalable applications. Mastering Clojure gives you an insight into the nitty-gritty details and more advanced features of the Clojure programming language to create more scalable, maintainable, and elegant applications. You’ll start off by learning the details of sequences, concurrency primitives, and macros. Packed with a lot of examples, you’ll get a walkthrough on orchestrating concurrency and parallelism, which will help you understand Clojure reducers, and we’ll walk through composing transducers so you know about functional composition and process transformation inside out. We also explain how reducers and transducers can be used to handle data in a more performant manner. Later on, we describe how Clojure also supports other programming paradigms such as pure functional programming and logic programming. Furthermore, you’ll level up your skills by taking advantage of Clojure's powerful macro system. Parallel, asynchronous, and reactive programming techniques are also described in detail. Lastly, we’ll show you how to test and troubleshoot your code to speed up your development cycles and allow you to deploy the code faster.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Mastering Clojure
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
References
Index

Reactive programming with fibers and dataflow variables


Dataflow programming is one of the simplest forms of reactive programming. In dataflow programming, computations are described by composing variables without bothering about when these variables are set to a value. Such variables are also called dataflow variables, and they will trigger computations that refer to them once they are set. The Pulsar library (https://github.com/puniverse/pulsar) provides a few useful constructs for dataflow programming. These constructs can also be used with Pulsar fibers, which we briefly talked about in Chapter 8, Leveraging Asynchronous Tasks. In this section, we will explore the basics of fibers and dataflow variables from the Pulsar library.

Note

The following library dependencies are required for the upcoming examples:

[co.paralleluniverse/quasar-core "0.7.3"]
[co.paralleluniverse/pulsar "0.7.3"]

Your project.clj file must also contain the following entries:

:java-agents
[[co.paralleluniverse/quasar...