I am tinkering with it but I haven't used it for anything in anger, although that might change in a minute. The XML features look useful.
You might want to have a look at the book "7 languages in 7 weeks" which covers a bunch of up and coming languages at a very high level.
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Reply to: Anyone used Scala
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Previously on "Anyone used Scala"
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I have used it a lot non commercially. Lots of the banks and hedge funds are using it.
The Coursera course Functional programming principles in.Scala is well worth a look and Scala for the impatient well worth a read.
I start a Scala contract in the next month or so.....
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I seen a contract going recently offering training into it.
Client was an American IB.
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Anyone used Scala
ML use it for FX and Equities. Apart from that not sure how big it is in the city. Have written some code at a bank and know of similar projects but again low volume. Great language when used in the functional stylee
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Will take a look at any events in London coming up, I have dipped a toe into the Scala world, seems very much geared towards concurrency and I like the mental challenge of learning a functional language (and it has has commercial benefitsunlike Clojure which while being a pure functional language no one on this earth is using in any commercial contexts), another one is groovy (+ Grails) which again (coming from the verbose java world) looks quite nice for web-site based projects.Originally posted by yasockie View PostThe community is not that huge yet, but I'd suggest you start by heading off to one the event being organised.
Scala solves a rather specific set of requirements for Java shops - being able to code you requirements in much more declarative and less boring fashion.
Given how most Java projects tend be run - ie. outsourced, I think that's the only reason it has not taken a bigger foothold yet.
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I'm glad it's not just me.Originally posted by ThomserveBAS View PostIt's what made the Commodore Amiga the professionals choice for multimedia authoring in the early to mid 90's
Spotted an Amiga 1200 on the Krypton Factor on Challenge TV this weekend - ahhh good times.
/sorry none of this helps the OP.
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It's what made the Commodore Amiga the professionals choice for multimedia authoring in the early to mid 90'sOriginally posted by VectraMan View PostScala was a multimedia authoring tool that did some quite fancy transition and animation effects, mainly because it ran in full screen DOS mode with page flipping.
You probably don't mean that though.
Spotted an Amiga 1200 on the Krypton Factor on Challenge TV this weekend - ahhh good times.
/sorry none of this helps the OP.
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Scala was a multimedia authoring tool that did some quite fancy transition and animation effects, mainly because it ran in full screen DOS mode with page flipping.
You probably don't mean that though.
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The community is not that huge yet, but I'd suggest you start by heading off to one the event being organised.
Scala solves a rather specific set of requirements for Java shops - being able to code you requirements in much more declarative and less boring fashion.
Given how most Java projects tend be run - ie. outsourced, I think that's the only reason it has not taken a bigger foothold yet.
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I take it that's a no thenOriginally posted by kal View PostI've noticed more and more contract roles asking for Scala as well as Java. Anyone got into it yet? I have taken quick butchers and it does look promising with some nice functional features, thinking of investing some time to learn it properly.
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Anyone used Scala
I've noticed more and more contract roles asking for Scala as well as Java. Anyone got into it yet? I have taken quick butchers and it does look promising with some nice functional features, thinking of investing some time to learn it properly.Tags: None
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