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| | andreabergia.com
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| | Error handling is a fundamental aspect of programming. Unless you are writing hello world, you will need to handle errors in your code. In this post, I will discuss a bit the most common approaches used by various programming languages. Return error codes This is one of the most ancient strategies - if a function can fail, it can simply return an error code - often a negative number, or null.
| | nurkiewicz.com
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| | Clojure is a dynamically, strongly typed programming language. It's a dialect of _Lisp_ running on the Java Virtual Machine. Lisp is 6 decades old and has a really weird syntax. That weird syntax is called _Polish prefix notation_. Basically, in every other language you've used math operators like plus or minus are infix. It means they are placed between operands. For example, `1 + 2`. In Clojure, you always put the operator (or any other function for that matter) in front. So simple addition becomes... `+ 1 2`.
| | patshaughnessy.net
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| | www.softdevtube.com
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| Passing data through a pipeline of transformations is an alternative approach to classic Object-Oriented Programming (OOP). The LINQ methods in .NET are designed around this, but the pipeline approach can be used for so much more than manipulating collections. This presentation looks at pipeline-oriented programming and how it relates to functional programming, the open-closed principle,