Podcast appearances and mentions of andrew summers

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Best podcasts about andrew summers

Latest podcast episodes about andrew summers

PSE Podcast
Ep 60. Transport, Community, and the Economy

PSE Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2024 26:20


Transport, as an enabler, can play an integral role in many of the priorities that government of all levels are trying to achieve. Whether it is connecting communities to the services that their lives revolve around, or bringing trade into economic centres, the transport network is an important place to start.Chief Executive of Transport East, Andrew Summers, spoke to host Dan Benn about the organisations Annual Review for 2023-2024, commenting on achievements, goals, and some stumbling blocks that have been encountered in the region.Expanding on the importance of transport in driving improvement around the country, Andrew said:“Transport is ultimately one of a number of enablers that support economic growth, a better environment and better outcomes for society, and indeed, part of our transport strategy was to try to articulate what those priorities were for us, and to then determine how we went about our work.”Considering the makeup of the East as a region, Andrew also touched upon the importance of keeping rural communities connected to both each other, and to the economic hubs nearby, saying:“One in three people in the East live in a rural community, and for us that's about 1.2 million people. So that's a significant amount of our population.“We've done a lot of analysis about their accessibility and it's pretty concerning. Two thirds of those live in what we class as a transport desert – that is, they have no access to education, training, skills, work by any means apart from the private car – and we have explored this a bit further. This creates significant transport-related social exclusion.”To hear more from Andrew on the successes and challenges of being responsible for transport developments in one of the most rural regions of the country, as well as what the future holds for transport in the East, listen to the latest episode of the PSE Podcast now.

INTO THE MUSIC
TUK: Powerful, melodic, cinematic, and confrontational music

INTO THE MUSIC

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2024 41:29


Text us about this show.Imagine a point where Metallica, Queen, The Black Keys, Foxy Shazam, Meatloaf and others intersect. Now stop imagining because that point exists with TUK. Andrew, Allen, Michael, and Ty pull from all of these influences (and keep adding more!) to create a sound unique not just in the local music scene in NE Wisconsin, but in the state. Their latest album, Confrontations, was three years in the making and is powerful and downright cinematic in scope. These guys aren't a one trick pony either as their acoustic performances are every bit as powerful as when they're plugged in. So turn it up because here's TUK!(Photo credit: Brandon Bjorkman at Motion Works Media LLC)"It's Not Me It's You" performed by TUKwritten by Andrew Summers℗ 2021 2573403 Records DK. Used with permission of TUK."Confronted" performed by TUKwritten by Andrew Summers℗ 2024 TUK Music Records. Used with permission of TUK.Support the Show.Visit Into The Music at https://in2themusic.com or https://intothemusicpodcast.com!Support the show: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/intothemusic E-mail us at intothemusic@newprojectx.com YouTube Facebook Instagram INTO THE MUSIC is a production of Project X Productions, Appleton, WI.Host/producer: Rob MarnochaVoiceovers: Brad BordiniRecording, engineering, and post production: Rob MarnochaOpening theme: "Aerostar" by Los Straitjackets* (℗2013 Yep Roc Records)Closing theme: "Close to Champaign" by Los Straitjackets* (℗1999 Yep Roc Records)*Used with permission of Eddie Angel of Los StraitjacketsT...

The Mike Hosking Breakfast
Andy Summers: Guitarist for the Police announces the NZ tour for 'The Cracked Lens + A Missing String'

The Mike Hosking Breakfast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2024 12:33


With over 75 million records sold, six Grammy's, and inductions into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, the Police are one of the most iconic bands in the world.  Although they're no longer making music as a group, each member is still immersed in their creative pursuits, and guitarist Andy Summers is following his all the way to New Zealand.  In an exclusive first announcement, Summers will be bringing Kiwi audiences ‘The Cracked Lens + A Missing String', an intimate, multimedia performance full of musical performances, stories, and his celebrated photography.  He told Newstalk ZB's Mike Hosking that tickets for the shows are hard to come by and he's getting a standing ovation every night.  “So, I think it's going well.”  Summers began his foray into photography while touring with the Police in 1979. He said he had plenty of time on his hands and photographers were abundant.  “I finally sort of crossed over and got a good camera and said, ‘well, I'm gonna do this,'” he told Hosking.  “It turned into, you know, a passion that I stayed with ever since.”  When it comes to his photography, Summers favours abstraction, focusing on composition, values, balance, and colour as opposed to interesting faces or scenes.  “I think of it in formal properties,” he explained.  “Not like, ohhh, that's an exciting moment, you know, that man's doing something to that man, whatever.”  This different way of thinking carries through to his music as well, Summers citing a quote from critic Walter Pater: ‘all art constantly aspires to the condition of music'.  “I find the information that I had from music is sort of... you can take it across to photography. And again, you know, like in music you would be thinking of line shape, one thing contrasting against another, a structure.”  “All these things can be applied to photography.”  Summers blends his creative pursuits further, creating scores that go alongside his photographs. His newest EP ‘Vertiginous Canyons', releasing later this month, is a companion for his 2023 photography book ‘A Series of Glances'.  He revealed to Hosking that the score is entirely improvised, as he played around until he got sounds that inspired him and built each track off that.  “I made those tracks in one afternoon, which I think is very healthy,” Summers laughed.  There's often an idea that quality directly correlates with the time something takes, but Summers doesn't believe that matters, saying that some of the greatest things are done in minutes.  “I was trying to tell somebody this morning,” he said to Hosking.  “You know, you sit there and slog away trying to write something, and then you give up, and the last minute you give up, it suddenly arrives in your head.”  While some of it can be attributed to years of training and familiarity with his craft, there is another sort of mysterious element to it: a spark of inspiration.  Summers has been playing guitar since he was young, transitioning through styles and genres throughout his life. He grew up playing jazz and classical, learning from people like Kenny Burrell and Jimmy Rainey, and began his professional career in a rhythm and blues band before joining the Police.  After their disbandment in 1984, Summers began his solo career influenced by all sorts of music, taking inspiration from the likes of Thelonious Monk and Miles David.   “All this was something that I wish to take elements from and kind of build my own style.”  "What's more creatively fulfilling, post-Police or the Police?” Hosking asked, which Summers said was a “bit of a cruel question”.  “I can't really answer that,” he said.  The two are different things Summers told him, with the Police being “the magic band”, something that doesn't come along often, and his solo work being incredibly enjoyable as well.  “I've made 15 solo albums and I really dug into it,” Summers said.  He's renewed his studio equipment, confirming his plans to create more music in the coming future.  “I think we went through a weird time with Covid and everything seemed to have stopped, and now it feels like life is coming back again.”  “I'm on the road and I renewed the studio, so yeah, looking forward to it. Feeling good about it.”  Tour Dates:  19th September, Opera House, Wellington.  20th September, James Hay Theatre, Christchurch.  3rd October, Town Hall, Auckland.  LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Maino and the Mayor
The Weekend “What’s Up!” (Hour 3)

Maino and the Mayor

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2024


It's FRIDAY, so that means Dennis Peters from The Glam Band is in to help Producer Amanda give us a rundown of some fun stuff to do this weekend in NEWisco. Plus Maino sings a little Waylon Jennings for Amanda this morning. Then we feature the music of Andrew Summers from the band TUK. Amazing music in the LIVE From The City Deck Landing Studios Music Series. Turn it up! Maino and the Mayor is a part of the Civic Media radio network and airs Monday through Friday from 6-8 am on WGBW in Green Bay and on WISS in Oshkosh. Subscribed to the podcast to be sure not to miss out on a single episode! To learn more about the show and all of the programming across the Civic Media network, head over to https://civicmedia.us/shows to see the entire broadcast line up. Follow the show on Facebook and X to keep up with Maino and the Mayor! Guests: Dennis Lee Roth, Andrew Summers

CORE
TUK

CORE

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2024 52:12


TUK is a rock band out of Green Bay, WI. Their debut album, "The Story of Stereo City" showcased frontman Andrew Summers songwriting skills and influences. The band recently released a single called "I Only Smoke When I Drink" from their upcoming album. This marks the first time the members of TUK have all contributed to songwriting duties. As such, the sound of the album has moved more towards hard rock. Allen, Andrew, and Mike joined us for a live interview to discuss the upcoming album and future plans. TUK on the web: linktr.ee/tukmusicofficial Code Zero Radio is an independent streaming rock station broadcasting out of Appleton, WI. Listen on the website or anywhere using your smart speaker. If you'd like to support what I'm doing consider buying me a coffee: www.buymeacoffee.com/FoxCitiesCore --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/foxcitiescore/message

Bri Undeniably Presents: Deep Conversations with Dope Individuals

"Buy into the possibility of you."@bri_undeniably BOOK BRI TO SPEAK:briundeniably.com Also Available For Personal & Professional Development:WORKSHOPSTRAININGSCONSULTING Contact Bri:bri@briundeniably.com Find out more:https://linktr.ee/Bri_undeniably

bri andrew summers
Back To The Basement
Getting To Know ... Andrew Summers (Eat Defeat)

Back To The Basement

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2021 81:08


In this episode I get to speak to Andrew Summers!!!! Lead singer and guitarist for Eat Defeat! (Such a good F*****G band!) I got to see him play a couple of years ago on my travels back to the UK in the New Cross Inn when his band supported Masked Intruder. I loved the band from the first note and I'm so happy to say I loved the conversation we had for this podcast. We got to speak about all kinds of things and really got to know Andrew! I hope you enjoy it, too!   Check out their latest video ⬇️  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oL9C8Hc4qKE https://www.instagram.com/eatdefeatuk/ Theme Back - To The Basement by The Queers

InequaliTalks
Episode 14: Top Immigrants -- with Felix Koenig

InequaliTalks

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2021 17:48


Does immigration import inequality? Felix Koenig talks about his recent research on the contribution of migrants to the rise in UK top incomes, showing that immigrants make up a much larger proportion of the top of the income range than of the bottom. Paper: “Importing Inequality: Immigration and the Top 1%” by Arun Advani, Felix Koenig, Lorenzo Pessina, Andrew Summers. http://ftp.iza.org/dp13731.pdf Recommendations: - "A Star is Born" by Bradley Cooper https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1517451/ - "Ottolenghi Simple: A Cookbook" by Yotam Ottolenghi https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/39797678-ottolenghi-simple

Kings of War WorldWide (KOW3), the Podcast
Talkin Tactics #6 Fools Gold with Andrew Summers

Kings of War WorldWide (KOW3), the Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2020 76:29


Cyle Pool and regular (but extraordinary) guest Andrew Summers cover the Fools Gold scenario and how to win it!  Another great contribution to the knowledge base! If you like this come tell Cyle in the Kings of War WorldWide (KOW3) Facebook group at https://www.facebook.com/groups/172722949908327/  and Join the Conversation!    Music Credits:   Intro- "Epic Boss Battle" by Juhana Junkala   Outro- "Orc March" by Basematic   Both are licensed under Creative Commons   Voice Over provided by Gideon Belmont Hill 

The Quicky
Update: Could Maddie McCann's Parents Have Been Involved In Her Disappearance?

The Quicky

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 26, 2019 14:49


In May 2007 the lives of Kate and Gerry McCann were changed forever when their 3 year old daughter Madeleine went missing from the holiday resort they were staying in in Portugal. But were they involved in their own child's disappearance?  Today we speak with the author's of 'Looking for Madeleine' who will show us the evidence that continues to haunt Maddie's Mum and Dad as one of the McCann's biggest critics is sent to jail. CREDITS Host/Producer: Claire Murphy Executive Producer: Elle Beattie Audio Producer: Ian Camilleri Thanks to our special guests authors of "Looking for Madeleine' Andrew Summers and Robbyn Swan The Quicky is the easiest and most enjoyable way to get across the news every day. And it's delivered straight to your ears in a daily podcast so you can listen whenever you want, wherever you are...at the gym, on the train, in the playground or at night while you're making dinner. The Quicky. Getting you up to speed. Daily. Want The Quicky in your ears every day?  Subscribe at mamamia.com.au/the-quicky or in your favourite podcast app. Love the show? Send us an email thequicky@mamamia.com.au or call the podphone 02 8999 9386. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Shout Louder Punk Podcast
S3 E2: Summers from Eat Defeat

Shout Louder Punk Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2019 96:01


On our latest episode of the Shout Louder Punk Podcast we have a great chat with Andrew Summers! You may remember him from such bands as Eat Defeat, Kickback UK and The Fractions... as well as his career as a well-respected, Pokemon-obsessed tour manager. We get cosy in his living room in Leeds to talk touring, caffeine and all things ska. Fresh off a USA tour with Eat Defeat, he's got plenty of tales to tell. We reminisce about the noughties UK punk scene, harmless run ins with the police and trips to our favourite tour venues. Eat Defeat have just released a new single Wake Up, which you can hear on the podcast, along with their earlier song Can't Say I'll Miss You.

Kings of War WorldWide (KOW3), the Podcast
Talkin Tactics #3 Hammer and Anvil with Andrew Summers

Kings of War WorldWide (KOW3), the Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2019 69:13


Cyle Pool sits down again with Special Guest Andrew Summers to talk about Hammer and Anvil tactics in Kings of War.  Lots of wisdom dropped as these two wind through a great discussion of KOW tactics!   If you like this come tell Cyle in the Kings of War WorldWide (KOW3) Facebook group at https://www.facebook.com/groups/172722949908327/  and Join the Conversation!    Music Credits:   Intro- "Epic Boss Battle" by Juhana Junkala   Outro- "Orc March" by Basematic   Both are licensed under Creative Commons   Voice Over provided by Gideon Belmont Hill 

The Quicky
Could Maddie McCann's Parents Have Been Involved In Her Disappearance?

The Quicky

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2019 13:41


In May 2007 the lives of Kate and Gerry McCann were changed forever when their 3 year old daughter Madeleine went missing from the holiday resort they were staying in in Portugal. But were they involved in their own child's disappearance?  Today we speak with the author's of 'Looking for Madeleine' who will show us the evidence that continues to haunt Maddie's Mum and Dad. CREDITS Host/Producer: Claire Murphy Executive Producer: Elle Beattie Audio Producer: Ian Camilleri Thanks to our special guests authors of "Looking for Madeleine' Andrew Summers and Robbyn Swan The Quicky is the easiest and most enjoyable way to get across the news every day. And it's delivered straight to your ears in a daily podcast so you can listen whenever you want, wherever you are...at the gym, on the train, in the playground or at night while you're making dinner. The Quicky. Getting you up to speed. Daily. Want The Quicky in your ears every day?  Subscribe at mamamia.com.au/the-quicky or in your favourite podcast app. Love the show? Send us an email thequicky@mamamia.com.au or call the podphone 02 8999 9386. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Elixir Outlaws
Episode 25: Shift-Reduce Warning

Elixir Outlaws

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2018 50:48


This week the hosts talk with Andrew Summers about the recent improvements to dialyixir and how to incorporate it into elixir applications. Special Guest: Andrew Summers.

shift reduce elixir andrew summers dialyzer
Elixir Mix
EMx 021: “Dialyzer Pretty Printing” with Andrew Summers

Elixir Mix

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2018 53:34


Panel: Charles Max Wood Mark Eriksen Eric Berry Special Guest: Andrew Summers In this episode of Elixir Mix, the panel talks to Andrew Summers who lives in Chicago, currently. Working on Elixir development, and here to talk about how he wrote the dialyzer pretty printer. He is a software engineer for Albert.io, makes cool stuff every day, loves punk music, and Philadelphia sports. The panel talks about the Dialyzer pretty printing, Elixir, code writing, and more! Show Topics: 1:07 – Why are you famous? 1:11 – Andrew: Answers the question. 1:34 – Chuck: Nice. Is the dialyzer printer complete pretty printing or is it more than that? 1:45 – Andrew talks. He mentions the background information on this specific printer, which was written a decade ago. 4:13 – Panel: One thing that is helpful is that it is a static code analysis. In the Elixir we are writing these spec statements. For nothing else than this type is coming out. Then this looks at the code, and your spec says you are returning this, but I can tell that you are also returning X, Y, or Z. So it is helping us see what we are declaring a code to do, and that’s really what the code is doing. 5:28 – Guest: Yes, exactly. To continue that topic here is what else it’s saying... 6:08 – Panel: Our panelist is not here, but he has had to fix code before with that problem. With Dialect Dialyzer – how do we say this library is out-of-date? The code is out-of-date. How do I get my stuff to pass – to clean up my site? 6:54 – Guest: Containing that warning. Guest goes into further detail how to problem-solve this issue. 8:02 – Panel: So you are saying that I can funnel. 8:20 – Panel & Guest go back-and-forth talking about this topic. 9:49 – Panel: I am still diving into the system. Haven’t really used the printer, yet. Panelist asks Guest a question. 10:04 – Guest: At the forefront there are some configurations to help with that. 11:16 – Panel: Why would someone not want to use this? What are the cons? 11:23 – Guest: It would have to do more with CI than anything (one con). 13:06 – Panel: Lots of people are coming to Elixir New. Great. What is the selling point? Why should someone invest his or her time in this project? 13:33 – Guest: I find looking for a type spec is one more piece of information that could help the reader that would tell them what the code should be doing. Any information from the original author to be passed down is great. Having the machine to check that, whenever you push code, it’s an imperfect check (as we were saying). If it can tell you that you did something wrong, then why not? It gives you that extra red flag. There are huge benefits to that. Same reason we write unit tests. 15:20 – Panel: You are learning Elixir right, Chuck? Panelist talks about tech specs, code writing, and learning projects. 16:25 – Panel: Here is a tip to learning. One thing that I did I came to an existing project and writing a sub-system ( as series of modules) Writing the tech specs. As they are interacting with each other, then writing Dial Elixir, and grab the output to the file path to where my code is. Within my own code find where I am inconsistent. Andrew – you could get pages of output, right? Any tips for users? 17:37 – Guest: Isolate portions of your code base. 19:27 – Chuck: I do like the idea of the umbrella. Phoenix app out into an umbrella. A sub apps and they are more centered, smaller sized. Then, yeah. Start with Dialyzer on just that project. Isolate it, and this app in the umbrella. The output is much smaller, and good success with that. Now, one of the new features you added was the language / the code that it reports is an ERLANG term. That is not familiar to most Elixir developers. Especially if you are new to it. If you are turning this into a friendly Elixir thing, then you had to learn other programs. How did you get into this path? 21:00 – Andrew: Whenever there was complicated “something” at work – I was the person to go to. As I started to do it more and more I saw patterns in the output. Things were kind of predictable, and how to format things. It synchronizes weird. What would I do to write this task? Researched. There are 2 tools = LEEX and YECC. If you have 2 files in your source directory... 22:56 – Advertisement – Digital Ocean 23:39 – Panel: It’s cool. 23:58 – Guest: It brought me back to some courses from school. I thought that was funny. They are pretty contained tools. 24:36 – Panel: Part of your motivation was from Jose. 24:49 – Guest: Yes, definitely. 25:39 – Did you have any questions for Jose? 26:35 – Panel: You added the feature of... CREDO is pretty well-known. 27:28 – Guest: Sure, I guess I did skip some of that. Andrew talked about different libraries, ERLANG modules, and so on. 28:38 – Panel: What else are you doing? 28:45 – Getting error messages fixed for version 1.0. Trying to close-up the residual things. 30:18 – Guest keeps talking about support and other bugs. Andrew: If you see something, say something. 31:00 - Panel: There are languages that run on the beam. Something to create something more standard so different languages can depend on. Is there anything like that? To help you with your tooling? 31:40 – Andrew: Good question! Some of the things that happen at the Dialyzer level, stuff just gets dropped. 33:47 – Guest: How this works all together... 35:15 – Chuck: How to contribute to Dialyxir? 35:30 – Guest: Around error messages – is the best place to look. If you have a good editor hand, good place for that. If you are further into the compiler land – might want to play with that. 36:29 – Guest: ERLEX 36:43 – Chuck: What did you learn about building these libraries? 36:55 – Guest: I learned a lot about the construction of Elixir. Guest dives into this more. 38:25 – Chuck: The principle that you cannot bind... 38:51 – Guest: ...this area of my code-base... it would be nice to turn off those features. When I really do need it – I need it, but not so if I don’t need it. 39:39 – Panel: I want to point someone to a resource: TypeSpecs. 39:54 – Guest: I used that so much! Wonderful resource, I learned so much stuff! I stole all the output from that. I didn’t know that language had that?! 40:20 – Panel chimes in about this resource some more. 41:02 – Guest: We really do have a simple language. There are some weird things, but not a lot of constructs under the hood. Only a few data structures. It could have been more complicated. I was worried about that – but that never happened, because... 41:41 – Panel: Thanks for adding that. Very true. 42:51 – Guest talks about other things that are very simple, too. 44:35 – Panel: Are you doing fulltime with Elixir for programming? 44:35 – Guest: Yes, we are using other Elixir and JS App. In another life I used... They all can teach you something. Sometimes the journey of going there and realizing WHY you don’t want to be there is sometimes worth the journey! 45:20 – Panel asks guest a question. 45:25 – Guest answers question. Andrew: We have enjoyed our time in Elixir. It’s nice. 46:27 – Panel: Anything else? 46:33 – Panel: Where can people find you online? 46:40 – Guest: Elixir Slack, Twitter, GitHub. 47:01 – Picks! 47:05 – Advertisement – Code Badges Links: Andrew Summers’ Twitter Credo Erlang Dialyxir LEEX YECC Credo ERLEX TypeSpecs Curated Dev News for Busy Developers EX_JSON_SCHEMA React – Jsonschema – form Announcing Distillery 2.0 Distillery’s documentation! MKDocs EX_Json_Schema Sponsors: Get a Coder Job Digital Ocean Code Badges Cache Fly Picks: Eric Chrome Extension for News Mark Announcing Distillery 2.0 MKdocs https://hexdocs.pm/distillery/home.html. Charles  Launch by Jeff Walker Downcast Andrew Ex json Schema React json schema from

chicago news writing philadelphia launch panel react github printing panelists distilleries credo elixir advertisement isolate schema researched downcast digital ocean jeff walker chrome extensions erlang eric berry cachefly chuck nice panel one charles max wood go1gb907osh060513 elixir mix chuck how andrew summers coder job mkdocs code badges panel you panel it dialyzer leex busy developers dialyxir panel there panel so panel why panel anything panel are
Devchat.tv Master Feed
EMx 021: “Dialyzer Pretty Printing” with Andrew Summers

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2018 53:34


Panel: Charles Max Wood Mark Eriksen Eric Berry Special Guest: Andrew Summers In this episode of Elixir Mix, the panel talks to Andrew Summers who lives in Chicago, currently. Working on Elixir development, and here to talk about how he wrote the dialyzer pretty printer. He is a software engineer for Albert.io, makes cool stuff every day, loves punk music, and Philadelphia sports. The panel talks about the Dialyzer pretty printing, Elixir, code writing, and more! Show Topics: 1:07 – Why are you famous? 1:11 – Andrew: Answers the question. 1:34 – Chuck: Nice. Is the dialyzer printer complete pretty printing or is it more than that? 1:45 – Andrew talks. He mentions the background information on this specific printer, which was written a decade ago. 4:13 – Panel: One thing that is helpful is that it is a static code analysis. In the Elixir we are writing these spec statements. For nothing else than this type is coming out. Then this looks at the code, and your spec says you are returning this, but I can tell that you are also returning X, Y, or Z. So it is helping us see what we are declaring a code to do, and that’s really what the code is doing. 5:28 – Guest: Yes, exactly. To continue that topic here is what else it’s saying... 6:08 – Panel: Our panelist is not here, but he has had to fix code before with that problem. With Dialect Dialyzer – how do we say this library is out-of-date? The code is out-of-date. How do I get my stuff to pass – to clean up my site? 6:54 – Guest: Containing that warning. Guest goes into further detail how to problem-solve this issue. 8:02 – Panel: So you are saying that I can funnel. 8:20 – Panel & Guest go back-and-forth talking about this topic. 9:49 – Panel: I am still diving into the system. Haven’t really used the printer, yet. Panelist asks Guest a question. 10:04 – Guest: At the forefront there are some configurations to help with that. 11:16 – Panel: Why would someone not want to use this? What are the cons? 11:23 – Guest: It would have to do more with CI than anything (one con). 13:06 – Panel: Lots of people are coming to Elixir New. Great. What is the selling point? Why should someone invest his or her time in this project? 13:33 – Guest: I find looking for a type spec is one more piece of information that could help the reader that would tell them what the code should be doing. Any information from the original author to be passed down is great. Having the machine to check that, whenever you push code, it’s an imperfect check (as we were saying). If it can tell you that you did something wrong, then why not? It gives you that extra red flag. There are huge benefits to that. Same reason we write unit tests. 15:20 – Panel: You are learning Elixir right, Chuck? Panelist talks about tech specs, code writing, and learning projects. 16:25 – Panel: Here is a tip to learning. One thing that I did I came to an existing project and writing a sub-system ( as series of modules) Writing the tech specs. As they are interacting with each other, then writing Dial Elixir, and grab the output to the file path to where my code is. Within my own code find where I am inconsistent. Andrew – you could get pages of output, right? Any tips for users? 17:37 – Guest: Isolate portions of your code base. 19:27 – Chuck: I do like the idea of the umbrella. Phoenix app out into an umbrella. A sub apps and they are more centered, smaller sized. Then, yeah. Start with Dialyzer on just that project. Isolate it, and this app in the umbrella. The output is much smaller, and good success with that. Now, one of the new features you added was the language / the code that it reports is an ERLANG term. That is not familiar to most Elixir developers. Especially if you are new to it. If you are turning this into a friendly Elixir thing, then you had to learn other programs. How did you get into this path? 21:00 – Andrew: Whenever there was complicated “something” at work – I was the person to go to. As I started to do it more and more I saw patterns in the output. Things were kind of predictable, and how to format things. It synchronizes weird. What would I do to write this task? Researched. There are 2 tools = LEEX and YECC. If you have 2 files in your source directory... 22:56 – Advertisement – Digital Ocean 23:39 – Panel: It’s cool. 23:58 – Guest: It brought me back to some courses from school. I thought that was funny. They are pretty contained tools. 24:36 – Panel: Part of your motivation was from Jose. 24:49 – Guest: Yes, definitely. 25:39 – Did you have any questions for Jose? 26:35 – Panel: You added the feature of... CREDO is pretty well-known. 27:28 – Guest: Sure, I guess I did skip some of that. Andrew talked about different libraries, ERLANG modules, and so on. 28:38 – Panel: What else are you doing? 28:45 – Getting error messages fixed for version 1.0. Trying to close-up the residual things. 30:18 – Guest keeps talking about support and other bugs. Andrew: If you see something, say something. 31:00 - Panel: There are languages that run on the beam. Something to create something more standard so different languages can depend on. Is there anything like that? To help you with your tooling? 31:40 – Andrew: Good question! Some of the things that happen at the Dialyzer level, stuff just gets dropped. 33:47 – Guest: How this works all together... 35:15 – Chuck: How to contribute to Dialyxir? 35:30 – Guest: Around error messages – is the best place to look. If you have a good editor hand, good place for that. If you are further into the compiler land – might want to play with that. 36:29 – Guest: ERLEX 36:43 – Chuck: What did you learn about building these libraries? 36:55 – Guest: I learned a lot about the construction of Elixir. Guest dives into this more. 38:25 – Chuck: The principle that you cannot bind... 38:51 – Guest: ...this area of my code-base... it would be nice to turn off those features. When I really do need it – I need it, but not so if I don’t need it. 39:39 – Panel: I want to point someone to a resource: TypeSpecs. 39:54 – Guest: I used that so much! Wonderful resource, I learned so much stuff! I stole all the output from that. I didn’t know that language had that?! 40:20 – Panel chimes in about this resource some more. 41:02 – Guest: We really do have a simple language. There are some weird things, but not a lot of constructs under the hood. Only a few data structures. It could have been more complicated. I was worried about that – but that never happened, because... 41:41 – Panel: Thanks for adding that. Very true. 42:51 – Guest talks about other things that are very simple, too. 44:35 – Panel: Are you doing fulltime with Elixir for programming? 44:35 – Guest: Yes, we are using other Elixir and JS App. In another life I used... They all can teach you something. Sometimes the journey of going there and realizing WHY you don’t want to be there is sometimes worth the journey! 45:20 – Panel asks guest a question. 45:25 – Guest answers question. Andrew: We have enjoyed our time in Elixir. It’s nice. 46:27 – Panel: Anything else? 46:33 – Panel: Where can people find you online? 46:40 – Guest: Elixir Slack, Twitter, GitHub. 47:01 – Picks! 47:05 – Advertisement – Code Badges Links: Andrew Summers’ Twitter Credo Erlang Dialyxir LEEX YECC Credo ERLEX TypeSpecs Curated Dev News for Busy Developers EX_JSON_SCHEMA React – Jsonschema – form Announcing Distillery 2.0 Distillery’s documentation! MKDocs EX_Json_Schema Sponsors: Get a Coder Job Digital Ocean Code Badges Cache Fly Picks: Eric Chrome Extension for News Mark Announcing Distillery 2.0 MKdocs https://hexdocs.pm/distillery/home.html. Charles  Launch by Jeff Walker Downcast Andrew Ex json Schema React json schema from

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Elixir Talk
Episode 117 feat. Andrew Summers - Dialyzer and its new Pretty Printer

Elixir Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2018 38:18


We sit with Andrew Summers, contributor to the Dialyxir project and author of its new Pretty Printer. ** SHOW NOTES ** https://github.com/jeremyjh/dialyxir http://erlang.org/doc/man/yecc.html https://github.com/asummers

printers new pretty andrew summers dialyzer dialyxir
Counter Charge - Your Podcast For All Things Kings of War
CC168 - List Builder Studio with Andrew Summers and Steve Malone!

Counter Charge - Your Podcast For All Things Kings of War

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2017


malone list builder andrew summers
Ohiohammer - The 9th Age Podcast
CC168 - List Builder Studio with Andrew Summers and Steve Malone!

Ohiohammer - The 9th Age Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2017


malone list builder andrew summers counter charge
Investors Chronicle
Personal Finance Show: When ethical funds aren't so ethical

Investors Chronicle

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2017 22:07


Ethical funds might just surprise you. They can pay higher income than you'd expect and generate healthy returns. However, they might invest in stocks you're not so keen on too... This week's Personal Finance Show takes a look at when ethical funds aren't so ethical and looks at why some of them are outperforming. The team also tackles how to beat miserly interest rates by moving away from cash and into the market and also looks at why investment trust IPOs are back in fashion. Deputy personal finance editor Kate Beioley is joined by Andrew Summers, head of fund research at Investec Wealth and Emma Agyemang, Investors Chronicle personal finance writer. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

ethical ipo funds personal finance deputy andrew summers investors chronicle
20twenty
Healing From PTSD ' Forgiveness' - Corp Andrew Summers (ADF) - 15 Jun 2016

20twenty

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2016 27:12


There's plenty of talk on radio, but with 20twenty you'll find Life, Culture & Current events from a Biblical perspective. Interviews, stories and insight you definately won't hear in the mainstream media. This feed contains selected content from 20twenty, heard every weekday morning. See www.vision.org.au for more details Help Vision to keep 'Connecting Faith to Life': https://vision.org.au/donate See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.