Beginners Track: Sequential and Concurrent Programming with Erlang
At this engaging, intensive and highly practical 3-day Erlang eXchange
University Workshop, you will learn how to develop distributed, highly
concurrent systems with Erlang. We will cover all the Erlang basics,
such as sequential and concurrent programming, alongside error handling
and the latest language extensions. Best practices are introduced
throughout this Erlang course, which has been authored by Francesco
Cesarini, an acknowledged expert and international speaker on Erlang.
Course Contents:
At this engaging, intensive and highly practical 3-day Erlang eXchange
University Workshop, you will learn how to develop distributed, highly
concurrent systems with Erlang. We will cover all the Erlang basics,
such as sequential and concurrent programming, alongside error handling
and the latest language extensions. Best practices are introduced
throughout this Erlang course, which has been authored by Francesco
Cesarini, an acknowledged expert and international speaker on Erlang.
When: June 23rd-25th
Where: Erlang eXchange University
Learn how to:
- Read, write and design Erlang programms
- Develop concurrent systems
- Develop distributed systems in Erlang
- Perform hot code upgrades
- Use the Erlang development environment and tools
- Apply best practices for Erlang development
Audience
This Erlang eXchange University Workshop is part of the Beginners Track and suits experienced software developers and designers who need to learn how to program in Erlang.
Teacher(s):
Richard Carlsson
Richard Carlsson has been deeply involved with Erlang since the
mid-nineties. He was one of the original members of the
High-Performance Erlang group at Uppsala University, and has
contributed to many parts of the standard libraries, the Erlang compiler, runtime system, and the language itself. Among other things,
he is the author of Erlang's 'EDoc' documentation system and the
'EUnit' unit testing framework.
After spending the last three years first at Virtutech and then at
IAR Systems, he is now joining Kreditor to work full time with Erlang
again. He holds a black belt in Karate, but nowadays practices mostly Aikido when he can find the time. He is generally too busy thinking up
new stuff to ever finish his PhD.Richard Carlsson has been deeply involved with Erlang since the
mid-nineties. He was one of the original members of the
High-Performance Erlang group at Uppsala University, and has
contributed to many parts of the standard libraries, the Erlang compiler, runtime system, and the language itself. Among other things,
he is the author of Erlang's 'EDoc' documentation system and the
'EUnit' unit testing framework.
After spending the last three years first at Virtutech and then at
IAR Systems, he is now joining Kreditor to work full time with Erlang
again. He holds a black belt in Karate, but nowadays practices mostly Aikido when he can find the time. He is generally too busy thinking up
new stuff to ever finish his PhD.