Do you know about the Typed Clojure project? More or less Racket's contract system, for Clojure: https://github.com/clojure/core.typed To me, it's one of the great testaments to the power of Lisp that you can bolt on a…
This is a great article, and I think does a great job of surveying the landscape as it stands. Particularly great to hear reports of ease in hiring and training, which doesn't surprise me, but is nice to be able to cite…
I'm guessing that "homoiconicity" was intended, not "isomorphic". The former makes sense in context.
Do you know about the Typed Clojure project? More or less Racket's contract system, for Clojure: https://github.com/clojure/core.typed To me, it's one of the great testaments to the power of Lisp that you can bolt on a…
This is a great article, and I think does a great job of surveying the landscape as it stands. Particularly great to hear reports of ease in hiring and training, which doesn't surprise me, but is nice to be able to cite…
I'm guessing that "homoiconicity" was intended, not "isomorphic". The former makes sense in context.