Functional Geekery   /     Episode 134 - Claude Rubinson

Description

In this episode I talk with Claude Rubinson. We talk his experience learning and using functional programming as a sociologist, organizing software user groups, and more.

Subtitle
Functional Geeks, Geeking Functionally
Duration
01:12:50
Publishing date
2022-02-08 11:00
Link
https://www.functionalgeekery.com/episode-134-claude-rubinson/
Deep link
https://www.functionalgeekery.com/episode-134-claude-rubinson/#
Contributors
  Proctor
author  
Enclosures
https://www.functionalgeekery.com/podlove/file/336/s/feed/c/mp3/functionalgeekery_134_claude_rubinson.mp3
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

In this episode I talk with Claude Rubinson. We talk his experience learning and using functional programming as a sociologist, organizing software user groups, and more.

Our Guest, Claude Rubinson.

Claude Rubinson
Houston Functional Programmers website
Houston Functional Programmers on Twitter
OCaml Café on Twitter

Announcements

:clojureD is taking place June 11th in Berlin, Germany. The Call for Presentations is open through March 4th. Visit https://clojured.de/ for more information and to submit your proposal.

Lambda Days 2022 has been moved to the 28th and 29th of July in Krakow, Poland. Visit lambdadays.org to keep up to date.

Some of you have asked how you can support Functional Geekery, in that vein, Functional Geekery now has a Patreon Page.

If that is one of the ways you would like to show your support, you can find out more at https://www.patreon.com/fngeekery.

Topics [@2:01]

Welcome Claude
About Claude
Being a Sociology Professor and being on a functional programming podcast
How Claude got interested in Functional Programming
Unix
Python
Lisp
Larry Wall
“Learn a functional programming language for good measure”
Reading books and listening to podcast
Trying to understand the philosophy of functional programming
Houston Functional Programming User Group
Claude’s previous background with software
University of Georgia
Compensation Survey going full-in on the internet
Active Server Pages
SQL
The Dot-Com bust
Linux
Berkeley Unix Users Group
O’Reilly Press
“sed & awk” book
LaTeX
[R]()https://www.r-project.org/
University of Arizona
Charles Ragin
Qualitative Comparative Analysis
Boolean Algebra and Set Theory
Tuscon Free Unix Group
Having to write own version of software for Linux
University of Houston Downtown
Houston Python Meetup
What made Functional Programming attractive for next re-write
“You don’t really understand recursion”
Modeling Data in a SQL Database
Using Programming Language to impose rigor on thinking
Algebraic Data Types
Immutable Data
Gene Kim’s “Love Letter to Clojure”
The Biggest Problem in Functional Programming
Having to pick things up really quickly
Was lucky to be able to take the time to absorb ideas
OCaml
Getting Up and Running with an OCaml project
“This is hard, it is going to take some time, and that is okay.”
Eric Normand’s perspective on explaining as “Data, Calculation, and Actions”
Elm
Telling a story of the problem before selling the solution
Functional Programming for taming complexity and scalability
Picking a “Functional Forward” or “Functional First” language
JavaScript
What Claude appreciated the Functional Programming community
Haskell
Qt
High Signal to Noise ratio
Generous and kind community
Members know a number of languages, so can provide comparisons between languages
How Claude uses Type Systems
Tcl/Tk
Ousterhout’s Dichotomy
Using the type system to think through reasoning
“How to do QCA well”
Using Type Signatures (without code) to map the process
“Understanding the Ontology of Measurement”
Writing good clean functions that stand on their own
“Working in OCaml to understand how to do QCA and how to do it well”
Houston Functional Programming User Group
Likely sticking to Hybrid Format
Always looking for speakers
“Introduction to” gets more people showing up
Encourage people to give presentations (even if short ones)
OCaml Café
Call for stability from Programming Language Designers and Library maintainers

As always, a giant Thank You goes to David Belcher for the logo design.