clojure-uk

A place for people in the UK, near the UK, visiting the UK, planning to visit the UK or just vaguely interested to randomly chat about things (often vi and emacs, occasionally clojure). More general the #ldnclj
dharrigan 2020-10-30T07:12:37.319100Z

Good Morning!

djm 2020-10-30T07:29:13.319300Z

๐Ÿ‘‹

mccraigmccraig 2020-10-30T08:53:00.319600Z

mรฅning

agile_geek 2020-10-30T09:10:08.319900Z

Bore da :welsh_flag:

agile_geek 2020-10-30T09:20:09.322900Z

I just posted a link to get 20% off the tickets for Build IT Right conference on 12th November but as I know most of the ppl who hang out in this channel personally if you want to attend and you DM me I can give you a link for 50% off.

๐Ÿ‘ 1
alexlynham 2020-10-30T09:31:08.323Z

morning

jasonbell 2020-10-30T10:08:56.323300Z

Morning

2020-10-30T10:09:57.323500Z

Bore da!

2020-10-30T11:39:52.325Z

Java/Kotlin map function seems on ONLY operate on a single collection's values is there an variant that makes it behave more like Clojure's map ?

2020-10-30T11:42:23.325700Z

do I really have to use https://kotlinlang.org/api/latest/jvm/stdlib/kotlin.collections/zip.html as a seperate step?

2020-10-30T11:43:16.326100Z

(sorry for lowering the tone)

thomas 2020-10-30T11:56:18.326400Z

morning

Conor 2020-10-30T12:16:07.326500Z

Yes. Or at least, I have never seen a general purpose "map n sequences and join them together" function. I personally don't mind it, as the intent is clearer to me that way.

2020-10-30T12:22:42.326700Z

ah well. having to rewire thought processes is taking a while...

Conor 2020-10-30T12:23:51.327Z

I mean, feel free to write one, but you will probably be surprising anyone who reads your code

2020-10-30T12:26:22.327300Z

including me in 6 months time

๐Ÿ˜› 1
2020-10-30T12:26:24.327500Z

Good morning!