Elm reminds me of Haskell. In fact, I'm using `haskell-mode` (for now) in Emacs
to write my Elm code, and it works reliably. I'm not writing a Haskell app, but
if I were, I would define my application Model with the following Haskell code:
```haskell
data Model = Model { whitelistedChords :: [Theory.Chord]
, selectedChord :: Theory.Chord
, isPaused :: Bool
, tempo :: Int
}
```
When I first modelled my application state, I did something similar. After
reading more Elm examples of SPAs, I see that people prefer using type aliases
to define records. As far as I know, you cannot do this in Haskell; I believe
all types are "tagged" (something about "nominal typing" comes to mind). Anyhow,
Elm isn't Haskell; Haskell has cool features like type classes; Elm has cool
features like human-readable error messages and exhaustiveness checking for
cases. I love Haskell, and I love Elm, and you didn't ask.
Anyhow, this commit refactors my records as type aliases instead of types. I
think the resulting code is more readable and ergonomic.
Create a more convincing representation of the piano.
I would like to compute the left-offset based on the naturalWidth. That change
is probably forthcoming.
First of all, Elm's purity is beautiful. I think every language should model
their error messages and develop experience after Elm. If I didn't have to
download packages, I don't think I would need an internet connection to
troubleshoot my program's errors. This is how helpful I find the compiler.
Now that that's out of the way, here's what I've changed since we've last
corresponded:
- Use Elm's Browser.element to create a reactive application with state
- Write a function to generate all of the chords about which CDS knows
- Move some code out of Main.elm into other modules
- Depend on List.Extra, Random, Random.Extra
What's left:
- Lots of work
- Instead of clicking a button to show a new chord, use a timer
- Add mobile-first styling (probably add TailwindCSS)
- Persist settings in LocalStorage (and then eventually create user accounts)
- Allow users to curate the list of chords they're interested in practicing
- Deploy the website and dogfood it
Unknowns:
- How can I handle tempo? I don't expect setInterval to be enough (maybe it
is)...
Initialize an Elm application to build a MVP for the Chord Drill Sergeant
application. There isn't much to see at the moment. I'm just sketching
ideas. More forthcoming...
See the README for more context on typo-po.
I drank a strong cup of coffee this morning, and I cannot quiet the activity in
my head. I'm attempting to use READMEs in my //website/sandbox to track ideas
that I would typically track using my phone's notes application. Creating a
README forces me to write more than I may have written in my phone's
notes. Also, since this repository is available at https://git.wpcarro.dev, I
can share these ideas with friends by sending them a URL! So much for "stealth
mode"... Well I guess this stress-tests my theory that ideas are less important
than execution.
In //website, I have the following directories about habits:
- days-of-week-habits
- habitgarden
- habits
Without READMEs in each of these directories, visitors (and myself) can
easily get confused.
I think it might be a good idea to version control my habits, so that I can
audit them as they change.
I'm publishing these on my website, so that I can refer to them wherever I had
internet.
briefcase's top-level .gitignore ignores node_modules, so I never noticed that
it was missing from my boilerplate .gitignore. I don't *really* need to add it
to that .gitignore, but if I want to cleanly eject directories from this
monorepo, it makes sense to keep the .gitignore files local to each project.
Problem:
Prettier was not running when I saved Emacs buffers.
Why?
- prettier-js-mode needs needs node; lorri exposes node to direnv; direnv
exposes node to Emacs; lorri was not working as expected.
Solution:
Now that I'm using nix-buffer, I can properly expose node (and other
dependencies) to my Emacs buffers. Now Prettier is working.
Commentary:
Since prettier hadn't worked for so long, I stopped thinking about it. As such,
I did not include it as a dependency in boilerplate/typescript. I added it
now. I retroactively ran prettier across a few of my frontend projects to unify
the code styling.
I may need to run...
```shell
$ cd ~/briefcase
$ nix-shell
$ npx prettier --list-different "**/*.{js,ts,jsx,tsx,html,css,json}"
```
...to see which files I should have formatted.
Lorri does not cleanly integrate with my corporate device, which cannot run
NixOS. To expose dependencies to Emacs buffers, I will use nix-buffer.el, which
reads its values from dir-locals.nix. To easily expose dependencies from my
existing shell.nix files into dir-locals.nix, I wrote a Nix utility function.
By default Parcel prefixes output paths with /. So when Chrome loads
wpcarro.dev/goals it attempts to get the CSS and JS and other assets from
wpcarro.dev/ instead of wpcarro.dev/goals/. Using the --public-url ./ option
makes Parcel output relative paths, which should work better for my needs.
After deploying the version of this application that built everything in the
browser, which originally was the impetus for the entire project, I learned that
the babel in-browser transformer won't work. I'm not sure why, but I need to
move on from this project and do other work.
I ported the code to my boilerplate/typescript, which works. Wahoo!
I used the boilerplate/typescript project as a starting point. This project
fetches and renders books that I'm defining in a Contentful CMS that I created.
- Create ./website directory
- Add a sitemap to wpcarro.dev
- Move covid-uk directory to sandbox directory
TODO: Next sandbox, blog, and learn in the website directory