On Mon, Jan 2, 2012 at 5:28 PM, Stephen Compall
wrote:
> On Sun, 2012-01-01 at 23:16 -0500, Cedric Greevey wrote:
>> And that will obviously be chock-full of internals changes and
>> miscellaneous tweaks and not just the user-visible feature
>> changes/additions, aimed more at developers of Clojur
On Sun, 2012-01-01 at 23:16 -0500, Cedric Greevey wrote:
> And that will obviously be chock-full of internals changes and
> miscellaneous tweaks and not just the user-visible feature
> changes/additions, aimed more at developers of Clojure itself than at
> developers using Clojure to make other thi
On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 11:09 PM, Cedric Greevey wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 10:31 PM, Stephen Compall
> wrote:
>> On Sun, 2012-01-01 at 22:10 -0500, Cedric Greevey wrote:
>>> Odd that this isn't named not-empty? with a ? character.
>>
>> Not at all; it's not a predicate. See also `every?' ve
On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 10:31 PM, Stephen Compall
wrote:
> On Sun, 2012-01-01 at 22:10 -0500, Cedric Greevey wrote:
>> Odd that this isn't named not-empty? with a ? character.
>
> Not at all; it's not a predicate. See also `every?' versus `some'.
It's useful as an if or cond clause; that to me sa
On Sun, 2012-01-01 at 22:10 -0500, Cedric Greevey wrote:
> Odd that this isn't named not-empty? with a ? character.
Not at all; it's not a predicate. See also `every?' versus `some'.
> Where are these documented? Better yet, all the differences from 1.2
> in 1.3? There's one frequently-reference
On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 5:55 PM, Stephen Compall
wrote:
> On Fri, 2011-12-30 at 15:21 -0800, rahulpilani wrote:
>> 1: (ns prefix-tree)
>
> While this is just a sample, namespaces without at least one `.' are
> discouraged. I favor the Java convention (prefix with backwards
> Internet domain that
On Fri, 2011-12-30 at 15:21 -0800, rahulpilani wrote:
> https://gist.github.com/1541958
>
> I would appreciate any pointers on style or if I could implement it
> any better.
Here are some style pointers on 74487e9, though they may be more
specific than you were looking for.
> 1: (ns prefix-tre