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Learning Elixir

You're reading from   Learning Elixir Unveil many hidden gems of programming functionally by taking the foundational steps with Elixir

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785881749
Length 286 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Kenneth Ballou Kenneth Ballou
Author Profile Icon Kenneth Ballou
Kenneth Ballou
Kenny Ballou Kenny Ballou
Author Profile Icon Kenny Ballou
Kenny Ballou
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introducing Elixir – Thinking Functionally FREE CHAPTER 2. Elixir Basics – Foundational Steps toward Functional Programming 3. Modules and Functions – Creating Functional Building Blocks 4. Collections and Stream Processing 5. Control Flow – Occasionally You Need to Branch 6. Concurrent Programming – Using Processes to Conquer Concurrency 7. OTP – A Poor Name for a Rich Framework 8. Distributed Elixir – Taking Concurrency to the Next Node 9. Metaprogramming – Doing More with Less Index

Erlang processes and OS processes


When discussing processes in the context of Erlang, we are usually referring to Erlang processes and not OS processes. There is a subtle but very important distinction between the two. OS processes are scheduled and controlled by, well, the operating system, or more correctly, the kernel. The kernel is tasked with queuing, dequeuing, marshalling data, memory allocation, and many other tasks required for smooth process execution. Erlang processes, on the other hand, are processes local to the Erlang VM (BEAM). ERTS is the proverbial kernel in this regard. It is in charge of the scheduling and management of these processes.

Another important distinction between these two is a question of weight. Typically, when thinking of OS processes, these are heavy, clunky objects to deal with, and forget about inter-process communication. Erlang processes are, in contrast, extremely lightweight. In fact, it is not uncommon for a single Erlang VM to have many thousands...

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