Skip to content

training materials for Brave Clojure Intro to Clojure Training

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

wcedmisten-reify/training

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

24 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Intro to Clojure Training Materials

Learn more about Brave Clojure On-Site Training

Hello!

This repo contains all the examples, exercises, and projects we'll be working on. Every exercise and project you'll be asked to do has an example solution or implementation. You can look at these before or during the workshop, or not - whatever helps you learn better.

The exercises directory includes a Leiningen project that has all the code and exercises we'll be looking at during the lectures, as well as solutions under exercises/src/training/solutions. I recommend opening the exercises directory in your editor, connecting to a REPL, and trying the examples and exercises interactively.

The projects directory contains example implementations for the larger projects you'll be working on. For self-study, first use lein run to see how the program is supposed to behave. Then try deleting individual functions and reimplementing them from scratch, or try reimplementing the entire project.

Have fun!

Extra Exercises

If you finish exercises early, check out these sites for additional practice:

Keep Learning

One of my goals for this workshop is to provide you with a sturdy foundation so that you can quickly and easily continue learning on your own. Here are my recommendations for books, tutorials, and projects, and other resources:

  • Land of Lisp. This is the book that got me started with Lisp. It covers Common Lisp, which isn't as immediately practical, but it still helps you understand Clojure better. Plus, learning Common Lisp is extremely useful because you'll be able to understand other great resources, like..
  • On Lisp. This is one of the best books on learning how to think like a Lisp programmer.
  • Clojure Applied is billed as a second book for Clojure, and I think it does a good job.
  • The Clojure subreddit is very friendly and helpful, as is the Clojure google group.

For projects, my advice is to think of something that you personally want to build, and try to build it. If you're interested in web development, Luminus is a good framework with good documentation.

This project is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 license.

About

training materials for Brave Clojure Intro to Clojure Training

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Clojure 97.9%
  • Java 1.1%
  • JavaScript 1.0%