Erlang Programming Language, including: Erlang (programming Language), Wings 3d, Ejabberd, Tsung, Mnesia, Yaws (web Server), Couchdb, Open Telecom Platform, Cean, Rabbitmq, Hibari (database)
Book Details
Author(s)Hephaestus Books
PublisherHephaestus Books
ISBN / ASIN1242972501
ISBN-139781242972508
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
Hephaestus Books represents a new publishing paradigm, allowing disparate content sources to be curated into cohesive, relevant, and informative books. To date, this content has been curated from Wikipedia articles and images under Creative Commons licensing, although as Hephaestus Books continues to increase in scope and dimension, more licensed and public domain content is being added. We believe books such as this represent a new and exciting lexicon in the sharing of human knowledge. This particular book is a collaboration focused on Erlang programming language.
More info: Erlang is a general-purpose concurrent, garbage-collected programming language and runtime system. The sequential subset of Erlang is a functional language, with strict evaluation, single assignment, and dynamic typing. For concurrency it follows the Actor model. It was designed by Ericsson to support distributed, fault-tolerant, soft-real-time, non-stop applications. The first version was developed by Joe Armstrong in 1986. It supports hot swapping, thus code can be changed without stopping a system. It was originally a proprietary language within Ericsson, but was released as open source in 1998.
More info: Erlang is a general-purpose concurrent, garbage-collected programming language and runtime system. The sequential subset of Erlang is a functional language, with strict evaluation, single assignment, and dynamic typing. For concurrency it follows the Actor model. It was designed by Ericsson to support distributed, fault-tolerant, soft-real-time, non-stop applications. The first version was developed by Joe Armstrong in 1986. It supports hot swapping, thus code can be changed without stopping a system. It was originally a proprietary language within Ericsson, but was released as open source in 1998.










