2014-04-22 20:32 GMT+02:00 Plínio Balduino <pbaldu...@gmail.com>:

> Some will say that Joy of Clojure is not the best choice for the newcomer.
>
> I read all the books more in your list more than once and had the better
> comprehension with JoC.
> The important thing is that I didn't get Clojure reading the first or
> second book. I just really understood after read the five books (that I
> call as "The Five Books of Clojure) and tried to create my own Lisp.
> Anyway, once you get the "click", all these books will become a lot easier
> to understand.
>

​So the sequence in which I read the books is not very important?
Formulated otherwise: no reason to switch from my original plan?



> On 22/04/2014, at 15:18, Cecil Westerhof <cldwester...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> I have a ‘little’ to learn. ;-) I have worked with a lot of languages,
> including Lisp. I was thinking about the following books (in that order):
> - Practical Clojure
> - Clojure in Action
> - The Joy of Clojure
> - Clojure Programming
> - Programming Clojure
>
> Someone told me it was better to start with Programming Clojure and after
> that The Joy of Clojure. Any idea's about this?
>
>
-- 
Cecil Westerhof

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