Subreddit for the Elixir programming language, a dynamic, functional language designed for building scalable and maintainable applications. Learn more at https://elixir-lang.org.
At https://elixir-phoenix-ash.com I publish training material for Elixir and Phoenix. Text base tutorials which start at zero. Recently I added material for the Ash Framework. It is a living document which is suitable for beginners. Preface Learning Elixir, Phoenix and Ash is a steep climb. No sugar-coating. This book aims to make that ascent less steep. It’s a guide crafted for beginners. A ...
Welcome to the unofficial subreddit r/ElixirElf, the ultimate hub for all things related to Elixir Elf! 🧝♀️ In this community, we share the cute/sexy content created by Elixir Elf. Whether it’s her pictures, or her videos, you can post it here. I'm just a fan
"Elixir is a dynamic, functional language for building scalable and maintainable applications." OK, there are lots of languages that are either or both dynamic and functional, and they can all used to build scalable and maintainable transactions. "Elixir runs on the Erlang VM, known for creating low-latency, distributed, and fault-tolerant ...
For the record, Elixir is the language, Phoenix is the Rails-ish web framework. Now to what I take your question as though, Elixir is having similar issues that Ruby did/does in that it is associated with just the one popular usage, which is web dev with Phoenix.