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Phoenix Web Development

You're reading from   Phoenix Web Development Create rich web applications using functional programming techniques with Phoenix and Elixir

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787284197
Length 406 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Brandon Richey Brandon Richey
Author Profile Icon Brandon Richey
Brandon Richey
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. A Brief Introduction to Elixir and Phoenix 2. Building Controllers, Views, and Templates FREE CHAPTER 3. Storing and Retrieving Vote Data with Ecto Pages 4. Introducing User Accounts and Sessions 5. Validations, Errors, and Tying Loose Ends 6. Live Voting with Phoenix 7. Improving Our Application and Adding Features 8. Adding Chat to Your Phoenix Application 9. Using Presence and ETS in Phoenix 10. Working with Elixir's Concurrency Model 11. Implementing OAuth in Our Application 12. Building an API and Deploying 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Introduction to Elixir's concurrency model

We talked a bit at the start about the concurrency and parallelism model at play in your standard Phoenix application but not really a lot about what it actually means. Sure, we get great scaling and performance right out of the box, but what is really going on? Phoenix is built to heavily lean on the BEAM VM's constructs, which allow multiple processes to be spun up at a moment's notice and discarded almost as quickly! The ability to spin up new processes with very low initial cost and toss them away without any repercussions to the rest of the system is a large part of what enables us to create such projects and architectures in Phoenix!

In Elixir, we typically try to divide up related bits of work into their own processes, much in the same way that in an object-oriented language you may try to separate functionality...

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