146 lines
4.8 KiB
Markdown
146 lines
4.8 KiB
Markdown
# Clojure Koans
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The Clojure Koans are a fun and easy way to get started with Clojure - no
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experience assumed or required. Just follow the instructions below to start
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making tests pass!
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### Getting Started
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The easiest and fastest way to get the koans up and running is to [download the
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latest zip file from Github](https://github.com/functional-koans/clojure-koans/downloads).
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This way, you'll have all the dependencies you need, including Clojure itself
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and JLine, and you can skip the rest of this section (skip to "Running the
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Koans").
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If you're starting from a cloned or forked repo, that's cool too. This way
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you'll be able to track your progress in Git, and see how your answers compare
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to others, by checking out the project's Network tab. You might want to create your
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own branch - that way if you pull back the latest koans from master, it'll be a bit
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easier to manage the inevitable conflicts if we make changes to exercises you've already
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completed.
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The only things you'll need to run the Clojure Koans are:
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- JRE 1.5 or higher
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- [clojure-1.3.0-alpha4.jar](https://github.com/downloads/clojure/clojure/clojure-1.3.0-alpha4.zip)
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clojure-1.3.0-alpha4.jar needs to be in a directory `lib` under this project.
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You can use [Leiningen](http://github.com/technomancy/leiningen) to
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automatically install the Clojure jar in the right place. Leiningen will also
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get you a couple more jarfiles, including JLine, which allows you some of the
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functionality of readline (command-line history, for example).
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After you have leiningen installed, run
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`lein deps`
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which will download all dependencies you need to run the Clojure koans.
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### Running the Koans
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To run the koans, simply run
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`script/run` on Mac/\*nix
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`script\run` on Windows
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You'll see something like this:
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FAIL in clojure.lang.PersistentList$EmptyList@1 (equalities.clj:1)
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We shall contemplate truth by testing reality, via equality.
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expected: (= __ true)
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actual: (not (= :fill-in-the-blank true))
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The output is telling you that you have a failing test in equalities.clj.
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So open that file up and make it pass! In general, you just fill in the
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blanks to make tests pass. Sometimes there are several (or even an infinite
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number) of correct answers: any of them will work in these cases.
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The koans differ from normal TDD in that the tests are already written for you,
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so you'll have to pay close attention to the failure messages, because up until
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the very end, making a test pass just means that the next failure message comes
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up.
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While it's very easy (especially at first) to just fill in the blanks making
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things pass, you should work slowly, making sure you understand why the answer
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is what it is. Enjoy your path to Clojure enlightenment!
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### Trying more things out
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There's a REPL (Read-Evaluate-Print Loop) included in the Clojure Koans. Just
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run:
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`script/repl` on Mac/\*nix
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`script\repl` on Windows
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Here are some interesting commands you might try, once you're in a running REPL:
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(find-doc "vec")
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(find-doc #"vec$")
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(doc vec)
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And if those still don't make sense:
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(doc doc)
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(doc find-doc)
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will show you what those commands mean.
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You can exit the REPL with `CTRL-d` on any OS.
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### Contributing
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Patches are encouraged! Make sure the answer sheet still passes (`script/test`,
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or `script\test` on Windows), and send a pull request.
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The file ideaboard.txt has lots of good ideas for new koans to start, or things
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to add to existing koans. So write some fun exercises, add your answers to
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`src/path_to_answer_sheet.clj`, and we'll get them in there!
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Feel free to contact me (Colin Jones / trptcolin) on Github or elsewhere if you
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have any questions or want more direction before you start pitching in.
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### Contributors (in order of appearance)
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- Aaron Bedra
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- Colin Jones (maintainer)
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- Eric Lavigne
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- Nuno Marquez
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- Micah Martin
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- Michael Kohl
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- Ben Lickly
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- Alex Robbins
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- Jaskirat Singh Veen
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- Mark Simpson
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- Mike Jansen
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### Credits
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These exercises were started by [Aaron Bedra](http://github.com/abedra) of
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[Relevance, Inc.](http://github.com/relevance) in early 2010, as a learning
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tool for newcomers to functional programming. Aaron's macro-fu makes these
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koans extremely simple and fun to use, and to improve upon, and without
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Relevance's initiative, this project would not exist.
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Using the [koans](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/koan) metaphor as a tool for
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learning a programming language started with the
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[Ruby Koans](http://rubykoans.com) by [EdgeCase](http://github.com/edgecase).
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### License
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The use and distribution terms for this software are covered by the
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Eclipse Public License 1.0 (http://opensource.org/licenses/eclipse-1.0.php)
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which can be found in the file epl-v10.html at the root of this distribution.
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By using this software in any fashion, you are agreeing to be bound by
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the terms of this license.
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