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new4thaccount | 6 years ago
I might try again later. I have "Clojure for the Brave and True", Carin Meiyer's book, and one of Fogus' books.
I really want to learn Clojure, but just need to sit down and put the time in. It's also discouraging to see people comment about some of these languages (Clojure and F#) as being on life support.
iLemming|6 years ago
I can't say anything about F#, but Clojure is doing quite alright. It gathers more conferences and meetups around the world (more than Haskell, OCaml, F#, Elm or Elixir). Has more podcasts (defn, the REPl, Clojurescript podcast, Apropos, Cognicast), there are other podcasts created and run by people actively using Clojure, where they talk not only about Clojure. Clojurians Slack and clojureverse.org are very active. New libraries and books coming out regularly. My company recently was hiring and I shout out on Twitter and I got DM request from all over the world: Chile, Mexico, Brazil, Japan, India, Bangladesh, Jordan, Poland, Latvia, Ukraine, Russia, UK, Germany, US and other countries, people want to write Clojure full-time. So, yeah. I don't know where you read that Clojure is dying or whatever. It is not as big as Python or Javascript, but it's slowly, steadily growing.