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Readme.md |
Title: WTFunctional – Talk slides and examples Author: Oliver Rümpelein Affiliation: Member of F3L-Team Quotes Language: english Date: 2016-05-25 CSS: /md.css Html header:
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The talk was first held at 3. F3L-GPN in Regensburg, on 2015-06-11. Its target is to show how even non-functional programming languages can profit from using functional paradigms.
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Files
You may download both the slides PDF in handout mode, and a source archive of the examples used during the talk.
Structure
The talk is split into three main parts:
- Part One
- deals with functional programming in general. What are its benefits?
- Afterwards, the main ideas behind it get shown using Haskell.
- Part Two
- is all about using some of the mentioned ideas in Python.
- The focus lies on getting a feeling for functional programming, using a language that is heavily influenced by those designs.
- Part Three
- tries to transfer those ideas to C++.
- It also deals with the weaknesses and advantages of the modern C++11/14, and gives a preview of some features in C++17/20/22
Pages
There are two main-pages for this talk. One is my homepage, the other one is the GitLab-server of F3L
Compiling
If any errors occur, please drop me a mail.
Slides
Unfortunately, the slides have quite a lot of dependencies. You need the following:
- A working instance of LuaLaTeX (some decent texlive-distro should suffice),
- Pygments up-and-running (usually in the repositories as 'python-pygmetize' or so),
- a working installation of the minted package for latex (once again, texlive should be enough), and
- the two fonts Inconsolata G and Fira Sans installed,
- not to talk of biber with biblatex.
Then, compile using
lualatex -shell-escape wtfunctional
biber wtfunctional
lualatex -shell-escape wtfunction
Examples
TBC
License
This is licensed under MIT-License. For the exact text, see License.txt.