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<towel>
lubegasimon[m], I'd recommend working on a problem set as well -- in my experience, ocaml is a language you really need to get your feet wet with in order to really grasp
<lubegasimon[m]>
towel: thanks for your recommendation.
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<lubegasimon[m]>
> lubegasimon: I like the text book you linked to, and find it worth going through it. I can as well recommend the "OCaml from the very beginning" (the first few chapters are online) http://ocaml-book.com/
<lubegasimon[m]>
hannes thanks, but what I really meant, is that, for one to get good at using Ocaml, should they first read the entire books as a first sprint, and then solving problems as another sprint, or concurrently ? FYI, am a newbie to Ocaml.
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<reynir>
lubegasimon[m]: I think it's one of those things that depends on how you learn, and what might work for one person might not for another
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<lubegasimon[m]>
> lubegasimon: I think it's one of those things that depends on how you learn, and what might work for one person might not for another
<lubegasimon[m]>
reynir , thanks
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