35 min listen
Episode 89: Joe Armstrong on Erlang
FromSoftware Engineering Radio - the podcast for professional software developers
Episode 89: Joe Armstrong on Erlang
FromSoftware Engineering Radio - the podcast for professional software developers
ratings:
Length:
53 minutes
Released:
Mar 12, 2008
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
In this Episode we're talking about Erlang with its creator Joe Armstrong. We started by looking at the history of the Erlang language and why it is so relevant today.
We then looked at Joe's approach to Concurrency Oriented Programming and its main ingredients: share nothing, lightweight concurrency and pure message passing. We also compared this to the classic shared memory approach to concurrency. We then looked at other interesting aspects of Erlang, such as its functional nature (and why this is important to concurrency) and pattern matching. Next we discussed how to implement distribution and fault tolerance, and we took a look at OTP, the "application server" for Erlang.
We concluded the conversation with a littel discussion about how Erlang was designed, it's current community as well as its future.
We then looked at Joe's approach to Concurrency Oriented Programming and its main ingredients: share nothing, lightweight concurrency and pure message passing. We also compared this to the classic shared memory approach to concurrency. We then looked at other interesting aspects of Erlang, such as its functional nature (and why this is important to concurrency) and pattern matching. Next we discussed how to implement distribution and fault tolerance, and we took a look at OTP, the "application server" for Erlang.
We concluded the conversation with a littel discussion about how Erlang was designed, it's current community as well as its future.
Released:
Mar 12, 2008
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Episode 10: Remoting Pt. 2: This is the second part of the remoting infrastructures discussion started in Episode 9. We take a look at how remoting infrastructures such as CORBA, .NET Remoting or Web Services work internally. This includes the low level details of the transport l... by Software Engineering Radio - the podcast for professional software developers