Course Information
Course Overview
Learn Distributed Programming in Erlang and become an expert in a niche market
Why learn Erlang
Erlang is a distributed parallel process oriented, functional programming language.
In 2018, the popular site StackOverflow rated Erlang as the highest paying programming language in the US, and among the highest in the world.
Many big players like Microsoft, IBM, Ericsson, WhatsApp etc use Erlang for their backend functionality.
This course teaches you:
to install and setup Erlang on a PC and Mac
the language basics like
functions
data types
lists
etc
control structures
functions and higher order functions
concurrent processing
This course opens up many opportunities to work in a niche market, where your skills will be highly values by employers. There is a huge shortage of Erlang skills, and you can claim the top spot.
Erlang is also a fun language to learn, making it easy to communicate between computers across the internet. It's a great skill to have if you're looking to expand your programming tool belt.
We will build examples at every step and learn by applying the knowledge. We will also build a distributed chat application to exemplify the knowledge we learn.
This course explains step by step what the structures and functionality are for and how to apply them in a real world scenario.
Sign up today and let's start learning Erlang together.
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Course Content
- 9 section(s)
- 36 lecture(s)
- Section 1 Introduction
- Section 2 Development Environment
- Section 3 Hello World
- Section 4 Language Basics
- Section 5 Control Structures
- Section 6 Car Dealership
- Section 7 Functions
- Section 8 Concurrent Processing
- Section 9 Conclusion
What You’ll Learn
- Erlang programming language
- Network communication
- Real time communication
- Learn to code
Skills covered in this course
Reviews
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CCyril Agbi
Would like more tests like the car dealership challenge. Otherwise a very easy to follow course
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HHugh Nicklin
1: Errors. conversion of celsius to Fahrenheit Tuple example is wrong. 20 degrees C is not 42.111 but 75.111 degrees F. You forgot to add 32. Doesn't anyone check their work? Careless and poor attention to detail. 2: Speech mannerisms of presenter. Why must there be an "OK" or a "right" after every phrase or sentence? It's annoying to listen to. 3. Improving a bit now
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KKatchapakesan Thamotharan
Really very fantastic and useful
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AAlberto Ordoñez Idrobo
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