Book Image

The Clojure Workshop

By : Joseph Fahey, Thomas Haratyk, Scott McCaughie, Yehonathan Sharvit, Konrad Szydlo
Book Image

The Clojure Workshop

By: Joseph Fahey, Thomas Haratyk, Scott McCaughie, Yehonathan Sharvit, Konrad Szydlo

Overview of this book

The Clojure Workshop is a step-by-step guide to Clojure and ClojureScript, designed to quickly get you up and running as a confident, knowledgeable developer. Because of the functional nature of the language, Clojure programming is quite different to what many developers will have experienced. As hosted languages, Clojure and ClojureScript can also be daunting for newcomers because of complexities in the tooling and the challenge of interacting with the host platforms. To help you overcome these barriers, this book adopts a practical approach. Every chapter is centered around building something. As you progress through the book, you will progressively develop the 'muscle memory' that will make you a productive Clojure programmer, and help you see the world through the concepts of functional programming. You will also gain familiarity with common idioms and patterns, as well as exposure to some of the most widely used libraries. Unlike many Clojure books, this Workshop will include significant coverage of both Clojure and ClojureScript. This makes it useful no matter your goal or preferred platform, and provides a fresh perspective on the hosted nature of the language. By the end of this book, you'll have the knowledge, skills and confidence to creatively tackle your own ambitious projects with Clojure and ClojureScript.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Free Chapter
2
2. Data Types and Immutability

Introduction

Clojure is a functional programming language, and functions are of primordial importance to the Clojure programmer. In functional programming, we avoid mutating the state of a program, which, as we have seen in the previous chapter, is greatly facilitated by Clojure's immutable data structures. We also tend to do everything with functions, such that we need functions to be able to do pretty much everything. We say that Clojure functions are first-class citizens because we can pass them to other functions, store them in variables, or return them from other functions: we also call them first-class functions. Consider an e-commerce application, for example, where a user is presented with a list of items with different search filters and sorting options. Developing such a filtering engine with flags and conditions in an imperative programming way can quickly become unnecessarily complex; however, it can be elegantly expressed with functional programming. Functional composition...