For those looking for a broader/more portable introduction, Xavier Leroy and Didier Rémy wrote a great high-level text on UNIX system programming a long time ago [1]. Of course it uses ocaml (perhaps motivating some to learn that language) but the style is low-level and straightforwardly imperative. The advantage is that it sweeps up a lot of the messy and boring error handling into the ocaml runtime and/or exceptions. This makes the code a lot easier to follow, but of course makes it look misleadingly simpler than it would be in C (etc).
Thanks! I just started the OCaml Programming Book this week to learn and language and get better at functional programming.
Cant wait to jump into this after
For those looking for a broader/more portable introduction, Xavier Leroy and Didier Rémy wrote a great high-level text on UNIX system programming a long time ago [1]. Of course it uses ocaml (perhaps motivating some to learn that language) but the style is low-level and straightforwardly imperative. The advantage is that it sweeps up a lot of the messy and boring error handling into the ocaml runtime and/or exceptions. This makes the code a lot easier to follow, but of course makes it look misleadingly simpler than it would be in C (etc).
[1] https://ocaml.github.io/ocamlunix/
Thanks! I just started the OCaml Programming Book this week to learn and language and get better at functional programming. Cant wait to jump into this after
Is there an actual book available?
Yes. Look at the README.
https://www.informit.com/store/linux-application-development...
Of course, I saw that, but if the text of the book is not freely available, then the examples wouldn't really be helpful, no?