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#!/bin/bash | |
# This is free and unencumbered shell script released into the public domain. | |
# | |
####################### Begin Customization Section ############################# | |
# | |
# Name of the recipe to fetch. You can run: | |
# ebook-convert --list-recipes | |
# to look for the correct name. Do not forget the .recipe suffix | |
RECIPE="La Jornada (Mexico).recipe" |
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(defn cat-many [out files] | |
(map #(with-open [o (io/output-stream out)] | |
(io/copy (io/file %) o)) files)) | |
(cat-many "/tmp/ciaran.mp3" '("/tmp/test-recording-1.mp3" "/tmp/test-recording-2.mp3")) |
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#!/usr/bin/env python | |
# encoding: utf-8 | |
import lxml.etree | |
import lxml.html | |
import requests | |
xml_sample = """<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> | |
<foo:Results xmlns:foo="http://www.foo.com" xmlns="http://www.bah.com"> | |
<foo:Recordset setCount="2"> |
My answer to: https://www.reddit.com/r/Clojure/comments/pcwypb/us_engineers_love_to_say_the_right_tool_for_the/ which asked to know when and at what is Clojure "the right tool for the job"?
My take is that in general, the right tool for the job actually doesn't matter that much when it comes to programming language.
There are only a few cases where the options of tools that can do a sufficiently good job at the task become limited.
That's why they are called: General-purpose programming languages, because they can be used generally for most use cases without issues.
Let's look at some of the dimensions that make a difference and what I think of Clojure for them: