About
Who am I?
My name is Thomas Weitzel. When people have trouble pronouncing my last name, I suggest to try White Cell. If you want to call me by my nickname, that's fine, too. It is Thomy, pronounced like Tommy.
I work as an independent software developer since more than twenty years. Industries I've worked in include Finance, Health Care, Automotive, Military, and Government. Mostly I worked on internal projects, but also some software products. My mother tongue is German.
What's the topic?
This blog covers my findings while exploring various aspects of programming in general, with a special focus on functional programming.
The motivation?
Why do people climb mountains? British mountaineer George Mallory famously answered: Because they're there. They want to reach the top faster, in a more efficient or elegant way, differently than anybody else, or even at all. That's how you approach problem-solving in programming.
What to expect
Since I'm coming from an object-oriented background, expect all sorts of problems I'm stumbling into and then getting out of. C, C++, and Java were my first professionally used programming languages. Later I switched to Scala, and even later to Kotlin. I had, and still have, a lot to learn, even more to unlearn, and I'm not nearly done yet. If you're having a similar background, maybe you can get something out of my mistakes and the occasional success.
Do, or not do. There is no try. – Yoda
The decision is not between doing something or not. It's that trying is something more than just any attempt.