Elements of Clojure
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Elements of Clojure

About the Book

A print edition of this book can be purchased here.

This book tries to put words to what most experienced programmers already know. This is necessary because, in the words of Michael Polanyi, "we can know more than we can tell." Our design choices are not the result of an ineluctable chain of logic; they come from a deeper place, one which is visceral and inarticulate.

Polanyi calls this "tacit knowledge", a thing which we only understand as part of something else. When we speak, we do not focus on making sounds, we focus on our words. We understand the muscular act of speech, but would struggle to explain it.

To write software, we must learn where to draw boundaries. Good software is built through effective indirection. We seem to have decided that this skill can only be learned through practice; it cannot be taught, except by example. Our decisions may improve with time, but not our ability to explain them.

It's true that the study of these questions cannot yield a closed-form solution for judging software design. We can make our software simple, but we cannot do the same to its problem domain, its users, or the physical world. Our tacit knowledge of this environment will always inform our designs.

This doesn't mean that we can simply ignore our design process. Polanyi tells us that tacit knowledge only suffices until we fail, and the software industry is awash with failure. Our designs may never be provably correct, but we can give voice to the intuition that shaped them. Our process may always be visceral, but it doesn't have to be inarticulate.

And so this book does not offer knowledge, it offers clarity. It is aimed at readers who know Clojure, but struggle to articulate the rationale of their designs to themselves and others. Readers who use other languages, but have a passing familiarity with Clojure, may also find this book useful.

The first chapter, Names, explains why names define the structure of our software, and how to judge whether a name is any good.

The second chapter, Idioms, provides specific, syntactic advice for writing Clojure which is clean and readable.

The third chapter, Indirection, looks at how code can be made simpler and more robust through separation.

The final chapter, Composition, explores how the constituent pieces of our code can be combined into an effective whole.

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  • Categories

    • Computers and Programming
    • Clojure
    • Software
    • Computer Science
    • Philosophy

About the Author

Zach Tellman
Zachary Tellman

Zach writes code and sometimes not-code. He currently works at Microsoft on a framework for conversational UIs.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Acknowledgements
  • Names
    • Naming Data
    • Naming Functions
    • Naming Macros
  • Idioms
    • When using inequalities, prefer < and <=
    • If a function accumulates values, support every arity
    • Use option maps, not named parameters
    • No one should have to know you’ve used binding
    • If you have mutable state, use an atom
    • An explicit do block implies side effects
    • Use the narrowest possible data accessor
    • Use letfn for mutual recursion
    • Java interop should be obvious
    • Use for to create cartesian products
    • nil should be the absence of only a few values
  • Indirection
    • Method Dispatch
    • What is an Abstraction?
    • A Model for Modules
    • Consequences of our Model
    • Systems of Modules
  • Composition
    • A Unit of Computation
    • Building a Process
    • Composing Processes
  • Notes

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