Events
2010.03.09
"Practical Erlang Programming" and "Erlang/OTP System Principles" Tutorials by Francesco Cesarini
At Qcon London 2010 Francesco Cesarini (founder of Erlang Solutions) will be giving two tutorials: "Practical Erlang Programming" on Monday, 8th March and "Erlang/OTP System Principles" on Tuesday, 9th March. These are an all- day events, will start at 9:00 and finish at 16:00.
In order to attend the tutorials you have to register here. Important! You can register for one tutorial, for both of them and also for the tutorials and QCon conference. When registering for the tutorial it's not compulsory to sign up for the conference itself. If you decide to attend also Qcon London conference, use the Discount Code "erlangug" and save £50 off the price!
"Practical Erlang Programming" Abstract:
This hands on tutorial will give you an introduction to the Erlang programming language. You will learn the basics of how to read, write and structure Erlang programs. We start with an insight into the theory and concepts behind sequential and concurrent Erlang, allowing you to get acquainted with the Erlang syntax and semantics. We conclude with an overview of the error handling mechanisms used to build fault tolerant systems with five nines availability.
Target Audience: Delegates who will benefit from this tutorial includes those want to learn more about Erlang and its concurrency model. Attending will put you on the right track in building distributed, fault tolerant massively concurrent soft real-time systems.
"Erlang/OTP System Principles" Abstract:
Erlang is just a programming language. To build highly scalable, fault tolerant systems with requirements on high availability, you need the OTP middleware. OTP consists of tools, reusable components and libraries, and design principles. In this tutorial, you will get an insight in the theory and concepts behind Erlang design principles, learning how concurrency design patterns they are used to build industrial grade systems. These design patterns, also known as OTP behaviours, include client servers, event handlers, finite state machines, supervisors and applications. We will explain the client server behaviour in detail, and provide an overview of finite state machines, event handlers and supervisors.
Target Audience: Delegates who will benefit from this tutorial are software developers and architects. You must have either attended the Practical Erlang Tutorial or have a good understanding of Erlang’s syntax, semantics and concurrency model (Either through the Erlang books or online tutorials).
These will be a hands on tutorials. Make sure you come with your laptop having installed Erlang and your favourite editor.
In order to attend the tutorials you have to register here. Important! You can register for one tutorial, for both of them and also for the tutorials and QCon conference. When registering for the tutorial it's not compulsory to sign up for the conference itself. If you decide to attend also Qcon London conference, use the Discount Code "erlangug" and save £50 off the price!
"Practical Erlang Programming" Abstract:
This hands on tutorial will give you an introduction to the Erlang programming language. You will learn the basics of how to read, write and structure Erlang programs. We start with an insight into the theory and concepts behind sequential and concurrent Erlang, allowing you to get acquainted with the Erlang syntax and semantics. We conclude with an overview of the error handling mechanisms used to build fault tolerant systems with five nines availability.
Target Audience: Delegates who will benefit from this tutorial includes those want to learn more about Erlang and its concurrency model. Attending will put you on the right track in building distributed, fault tolerant massively concurrent soft real-time systems.
"Erlang/OTP System Principles" Abstract:
Erlang is just a programming language. To build highly scalable, fault tolerant systems with requirements on high availability, you need the OTP middleware. OTP consists of tools, reusable components and libraries, and design principles. In this tutorial, you will get an insight in the theory and concepts behind Erlang design principles, learning how concurrency design patterns they are used to build industrial grade systems. These design patterns, also known as OTP behaviours, include client servers, event handlers, finite state machines, supervisors and applications. We will explain the client server behaviour in detail, and provide an overview of finite state machines, event handlers and supervisors.
Target Audience: Delegates who will benefit from this tutorial are software developers and architects. You must have either attended the Practical Erlang Tutorial or have a good understanding of Erlang’s syntax, semantics and concurrency model (Either through the Erlang books or online tutorials).
These will be a hands on tutorials. Make sure you come with your laptop having installed Erlang and your favourite editor.
Back to the Events






