Comparing ES7 and core.async
ES7 | core.async |
---|---|
async function() {...} |
(fn [] (go ...)) |
await ... |
(<! ...) |
await* or Promise.all(...) |
(doseq [c ...] (<! c)) |
ES7 | core.async |
---|---|
async function() {...} |
(fn [] (go ...)) |
await ... |
(<! ...) |
await* or Promise.all(...) |
(doseq [c ...] (<! c)) |
(require '[clojure.core.async :as async] | |
'[clj-http.client :as client] | |
'[clojure.data.json :as json]) | |
(def concurrency 5) | |
(let [in (async/chan) | |
out (async/chan) | |
request-handler (fn [url out*] | |
(async/go |
This is the example that comes with the reagent template converted to use HTML5 based history. This means there are no #
in the urls.
I just got this working, so there might be better approaches
The changes are
goog.history.Html5history
instead of goog.History
find app/src -name "*.js" -exec sh -c 'mv "$0" "${0%.js}.ts"' {} \; |
;; | |
;; NS CHEATSHEET | |
;; | |
;; * :require makes functions available with a namespace prefix | |
;; and optionally can refer functions to the current ns. | |
;; | |
;; * :import refers Java classes to the current namespace. | |
;; | |
;; * :refer-clojure affects availability of built-in (clojure.core) | |
;; functions. |