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Learning ClojureScript

You're reading from   Learning ClojureScript Master the art of agile single page web application development with ClojureScript

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785887635
Length 320 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Allen Rohner Allen Rohner
Author Profile Icon Allen Rohner
Allen Rohner
W. David Jarvis W. David Jarvis
Author Profile Icon W. David Jarvis
W. David Jarvis
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Toc

Table of Contents (9) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Ready for ClojureScript Development 2. ClojureScript Language Fundamentals FREE CHAPTER 3. Advanced ClojureScript Concepts 4. Web Applications Basics with ClojureScript 5. Building Single Page Applications 6. Building Richer Web Applications 7. Going Further with ClojureScript 8. Bundling ClojureScript for Production

Writing macros for ClojureScript

If you're new to Lisp languages, you may not be familiar with macros. In essence, Lisp macros differ from macros in other languages in that they are a mechanism by which code itself can be transformed and rewritten. We've already used a number of macros so far in the examples in this book, and, indeed, macros are a core part of ClojureScript and you can and should expect to find yourself using them frequently. They enable us to do things that would not otherwise be possible and to optimize and refactor code in powerful ways.

read and eval

In order for all of what we're about to say to make sense, it'll probably be helpful to first understand a little bit about how programming languages work. With most languages, there exists a reader function in the compiler that takes a series of strings and transforms the text you provided into an abstract syntax tree. That abstract syntax tree is then passed on to an evaluator, which knows how to take...

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