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The Clojure Workshop

You're reading from   The Clojure Workshop Use functional programming to build data-centric applications with Clojure and ClojureScript

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838825485
Length 800 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (5):
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Konrad Szydlo Konrad Szydlo
Author Profile Icon Konrad Szydlo
Konrad Szydlo
Yehonathan Sharvit Yehonathan Sharvit
Author Profile Icon Yehonathan Sharvit
Yehonathan Sharvit
Scott McCaughie Scott McCaughie
Author Profile Icon Scott McCaughie
Scott McCaughie
Thomas Haratyk Thomas Haratyk
Author Profile Icon Thomas Haratyk
Thomas Haratyk
Joseph Fahey Joseph Fahey
Author Profile Icon Joseph Fahey
Joseph Fahey
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Hello REPL! 2. Data Types and Immutability FREE CHAPTER 3. Functions in Depth 4. Mapping and Filtering 5. Many to One: Reducing 6. Recursion and Looping 7. Recursion II: Lazy Sequences 8. Namespaces, Libraries and Leiningen 9. Host Platform Interoperability with Java and JavaScript 10. Testing 11. Macros 12. Concurrency 13. Database Interaction and the Application Layer 14. HTTP with Ring 15. The Frontend: A ClojureScript UI Appendix

Leiningen Profiles

Profiles are a Leiningen tool that allows us to change the configuration of our projects. A profile is a specification that influences how a project behaves. For example, during development or testing, say that we would like to include testing frameworks in our builds but the production build does not need testing dependencies. Using profiles is a great way to separate different development setups that should be run against one code base.

Leiningen allows us to define profiles in a few places depending on our needs:

  • In the project.clj file
  • In the profiles.clj file
  • In the ~/.lein/profiles.clj file

Leiningen profiles defined in project.clj are specific to that particular project. Such profiles will not affect other projects. This allows separation between projects and the ability to customize them independently. We could have one application that uses the newest version of Clojure and requires different libraries to another application relying...

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