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Over the past few days, I had one of the most rewarding experiences in my development career, and I wanted to share the story. We now have ClojureScript running on Android. Not in a WebView, or using something like Cordova, but actually running in an embedded JavaScript engine. What just happened? Recently, I had done some work to create an iOS ClojureScript REPL app, Replete. This is all cool, bu
Introduction I was curious about the connections between some of the people I follow on Twitter and wanted to try visualizing it using D3 and ClojureScript using a force directed graph. The end result looks like this: Not a lot of surprises, there are a few clusters around common interests: Emacs, food, Dwarf Fortress, Hadoop, etc. Code In this post i’ll just share a minimum of ClojureScript code,
Introduction to ReagentReagent provides a minimalistic interface between ClojureScript and React. It allows you to define efficient React components using nothing but plain ClojureScript functions and data, that describe your UI using a Hiccup-like syntax. The goal of Reagent is to make it possible to define arbitrarily complex UIs using just a couple of basic concepts, and to be fast enough by de
07 November 2013 While none of the ideas in core.async are new, understanding how to solve problems with CSP is simply not as well documented as using plain callbacks or Promises. My previous posts have mostly explored fairly sophisticated uses of core.async, this post instead takes the form of a very basic tutorial on using core.async with ClojureScript. We’re going to demonstrate all the steps r
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