Thanks. I've tried that in the past. The problem is still that it doesn't give any feedback on progress.
I still struggle to see how people actually use this with devops on a day to day basis.
I think that some type of integration with tmux would work well - have a running tmux session, and then just queue commands from emacs to that session, instead of running directly through emacs.
Org-mode and babel sound like good ideas, but in practice I've found it very finicky to use.
My main problem with it is that, unlike with executing commands in the shell, with org you don't get any progress, and emacs seems to hang while running the command.
For example, running apt update tends to freeze emacs without any progress reporting for a few minutes.
I'm hoping that I'm doing something wrong and that someone can chime in with a suggestion, because I really like org-mode, and I really like the idea of doing devops using it.
I've been spending some time over the past few months developing a app for myself and family to help with this.
Basically, what I do is:
- make a list of books that I want to read
- over time, as I acquire the book, I have a tool to split up the book into separate chapters. These chapters are then loaded into the reading app.
- every day, I open the app and it chooses a chapter from a random book for me to read
- as I read, I highlight interesting, useful or difficult sections that I want to remember/study further
- instead of showing me a chapter, the app can also show a list of highlights from a previously read chapter. During this step it asks me to create little quizzes from the notes - either in the form of cloze replacements or simple q&a. Alternatively I can also create reflection questions or daily actions from the notes.
- in addition to the previous steps, the tool then also uses spaced repetition algorithm to review the little quizzes that I created from the books I've read
- every morning it chooses 10 of the actions that I identified and asks me how I am going to implement/practice them today
- every night it asks me how I practiced those actions
It does a bit more than this, but that's the main part. I've already seen great results from doing this, as I've always found the biggest problem with reading is that it tends to be too passive, and having the review and action steps helps alleviate that problem.
I was just looking at semantic-ui-react, and it looked great.
But then I tested their examples on my mobile phone and it looked really bad. It just seemed that it wasn't responsive at all, which really surprised me.
My opinion is that emacs/spacemacs is more optimized for day to day work, than for the out of box experience. Personally, I'm fine with that, and there are some great editors (like sublime) that work out of the box if you prefer that.
However, the people generally working with/on emacs are not looking for that, they are looking for an editor optimized for customisation. They have already gone through the experience of setting it up, so why would they spend most of their time making it easier out of the box?
There is a cost to everything, and so far most people on emacs side have decided to spend their time on improving it's power, not it's ease of use.
That's actually a pretty good barrier to entry. With emacs/spacemacs, if installing it is too frustrating for you, then configuring and using it is going to be way too frustrating for you.
The thing to realise is that, at least is my experience, REPL based development doesn't mean your are actually typing code into the REPL.
Instead, you develop code in a file, but constantly evaluate code as you go along.
When I work on a clojure project, I very rarely open the actual REPL, but I am constantly evaluating code and experimenting with different implementations of functions.
Then, when I'm happy with the results, I ask the editor to evaluate and insert the results back into the editor. This then becomes the unit test.
Thanks. Do you know if it works with the module system - for example, if I edit function definition in a module, and then send that module definition to the REPL, would any code using that module start using the new definition?
To me, being able to make changes to your code while keeping the current state in the REPL is key to interactive development.
My workflow is generally to build up state, and then experiment with functions on that state until I get the correct output.
This workflow is very natural in Clojure, Common Lisp and even Python (with IPython and autoreload).
However, in Racket you have to restart everything on every change. This works ok for smaller applications, but if for example, your state is a large dataset that you pull from a remote database, it becomes a little more difficult.
There are possibly workarounds, and I'm not saying that Racket is bad because of this. There are definite advantages to this approach, mainly for keeping everything simple and predictable. However, this was a roadblock for me, and the main reason why I didn't spend more time working on it.
I also miss the ability to make changes to code, refresh the browser and instantly see the changes (instead of having to restart the server after each change).
Racket is a really exciting language, especially with its focus on building small languages to solve problems.
However, where it fails for me is in its lack of interactive development. When I investigated it, there seemed to be no way to actually connect a repl to a running program.
Unlike with common lisp or clojure, with racket if you make changes to your code you have to restart the REPL, which destroys your state.
This was a big disappointment to me, because even python with ipython and autoreload allows for more interactive development.
I suspect that this decision was made because of racket's start as a teaching language, because it is simpler, but way less powerful.
I once delivered a public speaking course to a group of prisoners about to go on parole. It was really eye opening to see how low confidence most of them had, and how bad they were at expressing themselves. In my opinion prisons should be made a lot more like college - make it that prisoners are forced to learn skills instead of being forced to do nothing.
I've been using this for a while. I like the fact that it stores dates/times of command executed. I plan to combine this with org-mode to quickly get a report of all shell commands executed while I was working on a specific task. Helps if I want to convert it into a guide/blog post.
My go-to replacement for Wordpress is Grav. It is a flat file cms, which means that it doesn't require any database. All posts are stored in markdown files with yaml front matter. However there is also an admin GUI frontend for non technical users.
Not using a database makes it really simple to install or migrate servers (just copy the directory).
On the other hand, being a dynamic PHP app means there is no explicit build step needed, and you can build any kind of plugin that you need.
This looks great, and something I'm going to try using. It looks like it'll work well for small "embeddable" widgets as part of a normal article or blog post.
For some reason this made me think of clojurescript, and I think it might make a nice library for use in cljs as well.
I still struggle to see how people actually use this with devops on a day to day basis.
I think that some type of integration with tmux would work well - have a running tmux session, and then just queue commands from emacs to that session, instead of running directly through emacs.