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Free Functional Programming For Beginners DVD 2
Free Functional Programming For Beginners DVD 2
Date: 18 March 2011, 20:20

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Functional Programming For Beginners DVD 2
English | WMV3 1024 x768 | MP3 48 Kbps | 424 MB
Genre: eLearning

You've learned a fair amount about the functional programming paradigm's foray into general purpose imperative progamming languages (LINQ, Lambda's, etc in C# and VB.NET). And, of course, the newest language to join the Visual Studio family of languages, F#, is a functional language. You've heard us say how important functional language constructs are to the our current languages' capabilities to evolve in the right direction to meet the needs of the many-core future (the need for reliable and comprehensible concurrency, parallelism, etc) and, most importantly, to help vault computer programming into an age of compositionality (remember our talks on 9 regarding composability and evolution of software engineering as an engineering discipline?). Well, we decided to take a step back and teach you the fundamentals of functional programming at a level equivalent to any university. We even have a text book and professor who will expand our minds.
In this video, Dr. Meijer introduces Haskell syntax and notation (via a Haskell implementation called Hugs, to be precise, which is based on Haskell 98) and we learn about the Haskell syntax that represents the fundamental construct of functional programming: functions. It's not like you're used to in mathematics like f(x). Instead, in Haskell, a function is denoted without parentheses: f x. So, given the almost OCD requirement by Haskell language designers to eliminate any unnecessary clutter in the language, parentheses are replaced by space. Also, in mathematics, you're accustomed to multiplication expressed either as xy or x y. In Haskell, since space denotes a function, multiplication is denoted with a *, like x*y…

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