shardcake
Scalaz
shardcake | Scalaz | |
---|---|---|
3 | 3 | |
373 | 4,659 | |
4.0% | 0.1% | |
7.8 | 8.4 | |
4 days ago | 3 days ago | |
Scala | Scala | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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shardcake
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"Sharding with Pure FP" by Pierre Ricadat at Functional Scala 2022.
I find it a little strange to have an YouTube video, Reddit post, all about the open source library. But no clickable link to the source. Let me put it here.
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Shardcake, a library for entity sharding and location transparency
After 6 months in production we decided to release it as an open source library called Shardcake: https://github.com/devsisters/shardcake (it was coincidentally made public a few hours before the Akka licence change announcement).
- Show HN: Shardcake, a Scala open-source library for entity/actor sharding
Scalaz
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Going into year 2 of Software Development Foundation Degree, have a particular liking for OOP and SQL, any tips, info or pointers on where to go from there?
I'm sorry, but have you ever done functional programming for a real company, like in a functional programming language like Haskell, Scala, or F#? Have you ever used Scala cats or scalaz? Have you ever learned category theory and how to apply its abstractions in software? Listen u/judethedude2106 this person hasn't gone as far down the functional programming rabbit hole as I have. Beyond learning the basics like the difference between pure and impure functions, what are closures, what higher order functions are and the most common ones like .map, .filter, and .flatmap, the immutable collections like immutable linked lists and trees, and what a Monad is and common monads like those used for futures/promises, async programming, and Option (Some or None, which is used instead of null checking), the more advanced functional programming stuff like category theory based abstractions are totally useless for real jobs and is just a giant time suck. Don't waste years on functional programming, spend at most a few months on it and no more.
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Typeclasses explained in Java
If I managed to gain you interest you can take a look at one of the following libraries like cats, scalaz for scala and vavr for java which contain type class definitions and implementations for common types.
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In Search of the Best Functional Programming Back-End: 2021 Update
I’ve specifically had 2 job offers internally at my company because of this language. First with Cats and Scalaz and now with ZIO, Scala has taken the best parts of Haskell, the best parts of Scala, and made it really nice to work with. You can barely see the OOP leftovers.
What are some alternatives?
elasticmq - In-memory message queue with an Amazon SQS-compatible interface. Runs stand-alone or embedded.
cats - Lightweight, modular, and extensible library for functional programming.
scala - Scala 2 compiler and standard library. Bugs at https://github.com/scala/bug; Scala 3 at https://github.com/scala/scala3
Shapeless - Generic programming for Scala
alephium - Reference client for Alephium protocol
Monocle - Optics library for Scala
lila - ♞ lichess.org: the forever free, adless and open source chess server ♞
ScalaTest - A testing tool for Scala and Java developers
better-files - Simple, safe and intuitive Scala I/O
Chimney - Scala library for boilerplate-free, type-safe data transformations
Ammonite-Ops - Scala Scripting
Twitter Util - Wonderful reusable code from Twitter