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  <title>her.esy.fun</title>
  <atom:link href="gemini://her.esy.fun/gem-atom.xml" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" />
  <link>gemini://her.esy.fun</link>
  <description><![CDATA[her.esy.fun articles, mostly random personal thoughts]]></description>
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    <title>her.esy.fun</title>
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<item>
<title>Replace docker-compose with nix-shell</title>
<guid>gemini://her.esy.fun/posts/0024-replace-docker-compose-with-nix-shell/index.gmi</guid>
<pubDate>Thu, 02 Mar 2023 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
<category>blog</category>
<category>static</category>
<description><![CDATA[
# Replace docker-compose with nix-shell
description:  This is how I created a docker-compose replacement with nix-shell.
description:  Here is a solution to have a composable nix shell representation focused on
description:  replacing docker-compose.
keywords:  blog static
author:  Yann Esposito
email:  yann@esposito.host
=> /files/publickey.txt gpg
date:  [2023-03-02 Thu]



At work we use =docker-compose= to run integration tests on a big project that
need to connect to multiple different databases as well as a few other services.
This article is about how to replace =docker-compose= by =nix= for a local
development environment.

## Quick tutorial

### =nix-shell-fu= level 1 lesson

Let's start with a basic =shell.nix= example:

{ pkgs ? import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/22.11.tar.gz) {} }:

with pkgs: mkShell

{ buildInputs = [ hello ];

shellHook = ''

echo "Using ${hello.name}."

'';

}


And this could be understood in plain English as:

______
In the packages of nix version 22.11, create a new shell into which the package
=hello= will be installed. At the end of the install, run a script that will print
the package name. (Cf => digression)
______


If you copy/paste this in a =shell.nix= file and run ~nix-shell~ you get:

nix-shell

nix-shell shell.nix

these 53 paths will be fetched (84.69 MiB download, 524.77 MiB unpacked):

/nix/store/08pckaqznwh0s3822cjp5aji6y1lsm27-libcxx-11.1.0

...

/nix/store/zqcs5xahjxij0c8vfw60lnfb6d979rn2-zlib-1.2.13

copying path '/nix/store/49wn01k9yikhjlxc1ym5b6civ29zz3gv-bash-5.1-p16' from 'https://cache.nixos.org'...

...

copying path '/nix/store/4w2rv6s96fwsb4qyw8b9w394010gxriz-stdenv-darwin' from 'https://cache.nixos.org'...

Using hello-2.12.1.

[nix-shell:~/tmp/nixplayground]$


If you close the session and run it again, it will be much faster and will only
show this:

❯ nix-shell

Using hello-2.12.1.

[nix-shell:~/tmp/nixplayground]$


This is because all dependencies will be cached.
OK so, this is level 1 of /nix-shell-fu/.

Now, let's start level 2.

### =nix-shell-fu= level 2 lesson; scripting and configuring

This time, we want to launch a full service, as a redis docker would do.
So here is a basic shell script which is similar to the previous one but will
request =redis= as a dependency instead of =hello= and also as a launching script.
From there will add a little bit more features.

{ pkgs ? import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/22.11.tar.gz) {} }:

pkgs.mkShell {

# must contain buildInputs, nativeBuildInputs and shellHook

buildInputs = [ pkgs.redis ];

# Post Shell Hook

shellHook = ''

echo "Using ${pkgs.redis.name} on port: ${port}"

redis-server

'';

}


Again if you run ~nix-shell~ here is the result:

❯ nix-shell

these 2 paths will be fetched (2.08 MiB download, 6.99 MiB unpacked):

/nix/store/6w4vnaxdx12ccq172i8j5l830mlp8jlg-redis-7.0.5

/nix/store/b47gmsx9qx0c9vh75wsg8bqq9qd0ad6f-openssl-3.0.7

copying path '/nix/store/b47gmsx9qx0c9vh75wsg8bqq9qd0ad6f-openssl-3.0.7' from 'https://cache.nixos.org'...

copying path '/nix/store/6w4vnaxdx12ccq172i8j5l830mlp8jlg-redis-7.0.5' from 'https://cache.nixos.org'...

Using redis-7.0.5

97814:C 10 Feb 2023 20:44:36.960 # oO0OoO0OoO0Oo Redis is starting oO0OoO0OoO0Oo

97814:C 10 Feb 2023 20:44:36.960 # Redis version=7.0.5, bits=64, commit=00000000, modified=0, pid=97814, just started

97814:C 10 Feb 2023 20:44:36.960 # Warning: no config file specified, using the default config. In order to specify a config file use redis-server /path/to/redis.conf

97814:M 10 Feb 2023 20:44:36.961 * Increased maximum number of open files to 10032 (it was originally set to 256).

97814:M 10 Feb 2023 20:44:36.961 * monotonic clock: POSIX clock_gettime

_._

_.-``__ ''-._

_.-`` `. `_. ''-._ Redis 7.0.5 (00000000/0) 64 bit

.-`` .-```. ```\/ _.,_ ''-._

( ' , .-` | `, ) Running in standalone mode

|`-._`-...-` __...-.``-._|'` _.-'| Port: 6379

| `-._ `._ / _.-' | PID: 97814

`-._ `-._ `-./ _.-' _.-'

|`-._`-._ `-.__.-' _.-'_.-'|

| `-._`-._ _.-'_.-' | https://redis.io

`-._ `-._`-.__.-'_.-' _.-'

|`-._`-._ `-.__.-' _.-'_.-'|

| `-._`-._ _.-'_.-' |

`-._ `-._`-.__.-'_.-' _.-'

`-._ `-.__.-' _.-'

`-._ _.-'

`-.__.-'

97814:M 10 Feb 2023 20:44:36.962 # WARNING: The TCP backlog setting of 511 cannot be enforced because kern.ipc.somaxconn is set to the lower value of 128.

97814:M 10 Feb 2023 20:44:36.962 # Server initialized

97814:M 10 Feb 2023 20:44:36.963 * Ready to accept connections


Woo! Redis is started and it works!

But if you have multiple projects you want to have more control. For example, we
will want to run redis on a specific port.
Here is how you do it:

{ pkgs ? import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/21.05.tar.gz) {} }:

let iport = 16380;

port = toString iport;

in pkgs.mkShell {

# must contain buildInputs, nativeBuildInputs and shellHook

buildInputs = [ pkgs.redis ];

# Post Shell Hook

shellHook = ''

echo "Using ${pkgs.redis.name} on port ${port}"

redis-server --port ${port}

'';

}


And here is the result:

rm dump.rdb
nix-shell

Using redis-6.2.3 on port 16380

1785:C 10 Feb 2023 20:50:00.880 # oO0OoO0OoO0Oo Redis is starting oO0OoO0OoO0Oo

1785:C 10 Feb 2023 20:50:00.880 # Redis version=6.2.3, bits=64, commit=00000000, modified=0, pid=1785, just started

1785:C 10 Feb 2023 20:50:00.880 # Configuration loaded

1785:M 10 Feb 2023 20:50:00.880 * Increased maximum number of open files to 10032 (it was originally set to 256).

1785:M 10 Feb 2023 20:50:00.880 * monotonic clock: POSIX clock_gettime

_._

_.-``__ ''-._

_.-`` `. `_. ''-._ Redis 6.2.3 (00000000/0) 64 bit

.-`` .-```. ```\/ _.,_ ''-._

( ' , .-` | `, ) Running in standalone mode

|`-._`-...-` __...-.``-._|'` _.-'| Port: 16380

| `-._ `._ / _.-' | PID: 1785

`-._ `-._ `-./ _.-' _.-'

|`-._`-._ `-.__.-' _.-'_.-'|

| `-._`-._ _.-'_.-' | https://redis.io

`-._ `-._`-.__.-'_.-' _.-'

|`-._`-._ `-.__.-' _.-'_.-'|

| `-._`-._ _.-'_.-' |

`-._ `-._`-.__.-'_.-' _.-'

`-._ `-.__.-' _.-'

`-._ _.-'

`-.__.-'

1785:M 10 Feb 2023 20:50:00.881 # Server initialized

1785:M 10 Feb 2023 20:50:00.881 * Ready to accept connections


Woo!
We control the port from the file.
That's nice.

But, has you might have noticed, when you quit the session it dumps the DB as
the file =dump.rdb=.
What we would like is to keep all the state in a local directory that would be
easy to delete.

To achieve this, instead of passing argument to the redis command line we will
use a local config file to use.

{ pkgs ? import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/22.11.tar.gz) {} }:

let iport = 16380;

port = toString iport;

in pkgs.mkShell (rec {

# ENV Variables the directory to put all the DATA

REDIS_DATA = "${toString ./.}/.redis";

# the config file, as we use REDIS_DATA variable we just declared in the

# same nix set, we need to use rec

redisConf = pkgs.writeText "redis.conf"

''

port ${port}

dbfilename redis.db

dir ${REDIS_DATA}

'';

buildInputs = [ pkgs.redis ];

# Post Shell Hook

shellHook = ''

echo "Using ${pkgs.redis.name} on port: ${port}"

[ ! -d $REDIS_DATA ] \

&& mkdir -p $REDIS_DATA

cat "$redisConf" > $REDIS_DATA/redis.conf

alias redisstop="echo 'Stopping Redis'; redis-cli -p ${port} shutdown; rm -rf $REDIS_DATA"

nohup redis-server $REDIS_DATA/redis.conf > /dev/null 2>&1 &

echo "When finished just run redisstop && exit"

trap redisstop EXIT

'';

})


And here is a full session using this =shell.nix=:

nix-shell

Using redis-6.2.3 on port: 16380

When finished just run redisstop && exit

-------------------------------

[nix-shell:~/tmp/nixplayground]$ redis-cli -p 16380

127.0.0.1:16380> help

redis-cli 6.2.3

To get help about Redis commands type:

"help @<group>" to get a list of commands in <group>

"help <command>" for help on <command>

"help <tab>" to get a list of possible help topics

"quit" to exit

To set redis-cli preferences:

":set hints" enable online hints

":set nohints" disable online hints

Set your preferences in ~/.redisclirc

127.0.0.1:16380>

-------------------------------

[nix-shell:~/tmp/nixplayground]$ ls -a

. .. .redis shell.nix

-------------------------------

[nix-shell:~/tmp/nixplayground]$ find .redis

.redis

.redis/redis.conf

-------------------------------

[nix-shell:~/tmp/nixplayground]$ redis-cli -p 16380 shutdown

[1]+ Done nohup redis-server $REDIS_DATA/redis.conf > /dev/null 2>&1

-------------------------------

[nix-shell:~/tmp/nixplayground]$ find .redis

.redis

.redis/redis.db

.redis/redis.conf

-------------------------------

[nix-shell:~/tmp/nixplayground]$ redisstop

Stopping Redis

Could not connect to Redis at 127.0.0.1:16380: Connection refused

-------------------------------

[nix-shell:~/tmp/nixplayground]$ ls -a

. .. shell.nix


So with this version all data related to redis is saved into the local =.redis=
directory.
And in the nix shell we provide a command =redisstop= that once invoked, shutdown
redis, then purge all redis related data (as you would like in a development environment).
Also, as compared to previous version, redis is launched in background so you
could run commands in your nix shell.

Notice I also run ~redisstop~ command on exit of the nix-shell. So when you close
the nix-shell redis is stopped and the DB state is cleaned up.

## Composable =nix-shell=

As a quick recap you now have a boilerplate to create new =shell.nix=:

{ pkgs ? import ( ... ) {} }:

mkShell { MY_ENV_VAR_1 = ...;

MY_ENV_VAR_2 = ...;

buildInputs = [ dependency-1 ... dependency-n ];

nativeBuildInputs = [ dependency-1 ... dependency-n ];

shellHook = '' command_to_run_after_init '';

}


But if I give you two such =shell.nix= files, would you be able to compose them?
Unfortunately, not directly.
To solve the problem we will replace this boilerplate by another one that do not
directly uses =mkShell=.
And in order to make it fully composable, we will also need to narrow the
environment variables declaration in a sub field:

{ pkgs ? import ( ... ) {} }:

let env = { PGDATA = ...; }

in { inherit env; # equivalent to env = env;

buildInputs = [ dependency-1 ... dependency-n ];

nativeBuildInputs = [ dependency-1 ... dependency-n ];

shellHook = '' some_command $PG_DATA '';

}


With this, we can compose two nix set into a single merged one that will be
suitable to pass as argument to ~mkShell~.
Another minor detail, but important one. In bash, the command ~trap~ do not
accumulate but replace the function. For our need, we want to run all stop
function on exit. So the ~trap~ directive added in the shell hook does not compose
naturally. This is why we add a =stop= value that will contain the name of the
bash function to call to stop and cleanup a service.

Finally the main structure for each of our service will look like this *nix
service boilerplate*:

{ pkgs ? import ( ... ) {} }:

let env = { MY_SERVICE_ENV_VAR = ...; }

in { inherit env; # equivalent to env = env;

buildInputs = [ dependency-1 ... dependency-n ];

nativeBuildInputs = [ dependency-1 ... dependency-n ];

shellHook = '' my_command $MY_SERVICE_ENV_VAR '';

stop = "stop_my_service"

}



So let's start easy.
To run a single shell script like this with =nix-shell=, you should put your
service specific nix file in a =service.nix= file and create a =shell.nix= file
that contains something like:

{ pkgs ? import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/22.11.tar.gz) {} }:

let service = import ./service.nix { inherit pkgs; };

in with service; pkgs.mkShell ( env //

{

buildInputs = buildInputs;

nativeBuildInputs = nativeBuildInputs ;

shellHook = shellHook;

})


Now, if you would like to run nix shell for multiple files, here is a first qui solution:

{ pkgs ? import (...) {}}:

let

# merge all the env sets

mergedEnvs = builtins.foldl' (acc: e: acc // e) {} envs;

# merge all the confs by accumulating the dependencies

# and concatenating the shell hooks.

mergedConfs =

builtins.foldl'

(acc: {buildInputs ? [], nativeBuildInputs ? [], shellHook ? "", ...}:

{ buildInputs = acc.buildInputs ++ buildInputs;

nativeBuildInputs = acc.nativeBuildInputs ++ nativeBuildInputs;

shellHook = acc.shellHook + shellHook;

})

emptyConf

confs;

in mkShell (mergedEnvs // mergedConfs)


And now, here is the full solution that also deal with other minor details like
importing the files and dealing with the exit of the shell:

{ mergeShellConfs =

# imports should contain a list of nix files

{ pkgs, imports }:

let confs = map (f: import f { inherit pkgs; }) imports;

envs = map ({env ? {}, ...}: env) confs;

# list the name of a command to stop a service (if none provided just use ':' which mean noop)

stops = map ({stop ? ":", ...}: stop) confs;

# we want to stop all services on exit

stopCmd = builtins.concatStringsSep " && " stops;

# we would like to add a shellHook to cleanup the service that will call

# all cleaning-up function declared in sub-shells

lastConf =

{ shellHook = ''

stopall() { ${stopCmd}; }

echo "You can manually stop all services by calling stopall"

trap stopall EXIT

'';

};

# merge Environment variables needed for other shell environments

mergedEnvs = builtins.foldl' (acc: e: acc // e) {} envs;

# zeroConf is the minimal empty configuration needed

zeroConf = {buildInputs = []; nativeBuildInputs = []; shellHook="";};

# merge all confs by appending buildInputs and nativeBuildInputs

# and by concatenating the shellHooks

mergedConfs =

builtins.foldl'

(acc: {buildInputs ? [], nativeBuildInputs ? [], shellHook ? "", ...}:

{ buildInputs = acc.buildInputs ++ buildInputs;

nativeBuildInputs = acc.nativeBuildInputs ++ nativeBuildInputs;

shellHook = acc.shellHook + shellHook;

})

zeroConf

(confs ++ [lastConf]);

in (mergedEnvs // mergedConfs);

}


So I put this function declaration in a file named =./nix/merge-shell.nix=.
And I have a =pg.nix= as well as a =redis.nix= file in the =nix= directory.
On the root of the project the main =shell.nix= looks like:

{ pkgs ? import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/22.11.tar.gz) {} }:

let

# we import the file, and rename the function mergeShellConfs as mergeShells

mergeShells = (import ./nix/merge-shell.nix).mergeShellConfs;

# we call mergeShells

mergedShellConfs =

mergeShells { inherit pkgs;

# imports = [ ./nix/pg.nix ./nix/redis.nix ];

imports = [ ./nix/pg.nix ./nix/redis.nix ];

};

in pkgs.mkShell mergedShellConfs


And, that's it. Now when I run =nix-shell= it launch both Postgresql and Redis,
and when I quit the shell, the state is cleaned up. Both postgres and redis are
shutdown and the local files are erased.

I hope this could be useful to someone else.

## Appendix

### <<digression>> Digression

In fact, this is a bit more complex than "just that".
The reality is a bit more complex.
The nix language is "pure", meaning, if you run the nix evaluation multiple
times, it will always evaluate to the exact same value.
But here, this block represent a function.
The function takes as input a "nix set" (which you can see as an associative
array, or a hash-map or also a javascript object depending on your preference),
and this set is expected to contain a field named =pkgs=. If =pkgs= is not provided,
it will use the set from the stable version 22.11 of nixpkgs by downloading them
from github archive.
The second part of the function generate "something" that is returned by an
internal function of the standard library provided by =nix= which is named
=mkShell=.
So mainly, =mkShell= is a helper function that will generate what nix calls a
/

=> https://blog.ielliott.io/nix-docs/derivation.html derivation
/. Mainly, we don't really care about exactly what is a /derivation/.
This is an internal to nix representation that could be finally used by
different nix tools for different things. Typically, installing a package,
running a local development environment with nix-shell or nix develop, etc…

So the important detail to remember is that we can manipulate the parameter we
pass to the functions =derivation=, =mkDerivation= and =mkShell=, but we have no
mechanism to manipulate directly =derivation=. So in order to make that
composable, you need to call the =derivation= internal function at the very end only.

The argument of all these functions are /nix sets/
### The full nix files for postgres

For postgres:

{ pkgs }:

let iport = 15432;

port = toString iport;

pguser = "pguser";

pgpass = "pgpass";

pgdb = "iroh";

# env should contain all variable you need to configure correctly mkShell

# so ENV_VAR, but also any other kind of variables.

env = {

postgresConf =

pkgs.writeText "postgresql.conf"

''

# Add Custom Settings

log_min_messages = warning

log_min_error_statement = error

log_min_duration_statement = 100 # ms

log_connections = on

log_disconnections = on

log_duration = on

#log_line_prefix = '[] '

log_timezone = 'UTC'

log_statement = 'all'

log_directory = 'pg_log'

log_filename = 'postgresql-%Y-%m-%d_%H%M%S.log'

logging_collector = on

log_min_error_statement = error

'';

postgresInitScript =

pkgs.writeText "init.sql"

''

CREATE DATABASE ${pgdb};

CREATE USER ${pguser} WITH ENCRYPTED PASSWORD '${pgpass}';

GRANT ALL PRIVILEGES ON DATABASE ${pgdb} TO ${pguser};

'';

PGDATA = "${toString ./.}/.pg";

};

in env // {

# Warning if you add an attribute like an ENV VAR you must do it via env.

inherit env;

# must contain buildInputs, nativeBuildInputs and shellHook

buildInputs = [ pkgs.coreutils

pkgs.jdk11

pkgs.lsof

pkgs.plantuml

pkgs.leiningen

];

nativeBuildInputs = [

pkgs.zsh

pkgs.vim

pkgs.nixpkgs-fmt

pkgs.postgresql_11

# postgres-11 with postgis support

# (pkgs.postgresql_11.withPackages (p: [ p.postgis ]))

];

# Post Shell Hook

shellHook = ''

echo "Using ${pkgs.postgresql_11.name}. port: ${port} user: ${pguser} pass: ${pgpass}"

# Setup: other env variables

export PGHOST="$PGDATA"

# Setup: DB

[ ! -d $PGDATA ] \

&& pg_ctl initdb -o "-U postgres" \

&& cat "$postgresConf" >> $PGDATA/postgresql.conf

pg_ctl -o "-p ${port} -k $PGDATA" start

echo "Creating DB and User"

psql -U postgres -p ${port} -f $postgresInitScript

function pgstop {

echo "Stopping and Cleaning up Postgres";

pg_ctl stop && rm -rf $PGDATA

}

alias pg="psql -p ${port} -U postgres"

echo "Send SQL commands with pg"

trap pgstop EXIT

'';

stop = "pgstop";

}


And to just launch Posgresql, there is also this file =./nix/pgshell.nix=, that
simply contains

{ pkgs ? import (fetchTarball https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/archive/22.11.tar.gz) {} }:

let pg = import ./pg.nix { inherit pkgs; };

in with pg; pkgs.mkShell ( env //

{

buildInputs = buildInputs;

nativeBuildInputs = nativeBuildInputs ;

shellHook = shellHook;

})


=> /index.gmi Home
=> /gem-atom.xml Feed
=> /slides.gmi Slides
=> /about-me.gmi About

=> https://gitea.esy.fun code
=> https://espial.esy.fun/u:yogsototh bookmarks
=> https://espial.esy.fun/u:yogsototh/notes notes
]]></description>
</item>


<item>
<title>My first ChatGPT exchange</title>
<guid>gemini://her.esy.fun/posts/0023-my-first-chatgpt-exchange/index.gmi</guid>
<pubDate>Sun, 11 Dec 2022 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
<category>machine-learning</category>
<category>ai</category>
<category>gpt</category>
<description><![CDATA[
# My first ChatGPT exchange
description:  My first interaction with ChatGPT about Clojure and Monads.
keywords:  machine-learning ai gpt
author:  Yann Esposito
email:  yann@esposito.host
=> /files/publickey.txt gpg
date:  [2022-12-11 Sun]


# The first few questions for ChatGPT

I finally opened an account to beta-test ChatGPT.
I must say, I am quite impressed.
I asked it a few questions that I could have asked during an interview.
To my surprise, the answer given was, while wrong, believable enough to kind of
sneak the answer as right up to some imprecision.
Like if you squint enough, it could pass, but if you pay attention it is clearly
false.

So yes, mainly ChatGPT in this interaction was quite good at being convincing.
This is the same kind of impression you have from looking at AI generated images.
At first sight everything seems fine, but if you start looking to the details, many
things are off.

So here is the full interaction, I'll let the attentive reader find the
technical problems:


{{{logo}}} Can you write a clojure function that will reverse any string provided to it.

______



(defn reverse-string [s]

(apply str (reverse (seq s))))


This function takes a strings as input, converts it to a sequence of characters
using the ~seq~ function, reverses this sequence using the reverse function, and
then converts the resulting sequence back to a string using the ~apply~ and ~str~
functions.

Here's an example of how you can use this function:

user=> (reverse-string "hello world")

"dirow olleh"



Note that this function only works
for strings that contain characters in the Unicode Basic Multilingual Plane
(BMP), since the ~seq~ function only works on strings that contain characters in
this range.
If you need to reverse strings that contain characters outside of the BMP, you
can use the ~string-seq~ function instead of ~seq~ to convert the string to a
sequence of characters.
______

{{{logo}}} How would this function react if instead of string you provide an integer?

______

string, the function will fail with a ~ClassCastException~ because the ~seq~
function only works on strings, and you cannot convert an integer to a string in
a straightforward way in Clojure.
The ~seq~ function expects its input to be a string or a collection, such as a
vector or a list, and when you try to pass an integer to it, it will try to
convert the integer to a string by calling the ~str~ function on it.
However, since ~str~ only works on strings and collections, and not on numbers,
this will result in a ~ClassCastException~.

Here's an example of what will happen if you try to pass an integer to the reverse-string function:

user=> (reverse-string 12345)

ClassCastException clojure.lang. Numbers cannot be cast to

clojure.lang. IFn clojure.core/seq (core.clj:136)


To avoid this error, you can either make sure that the input to the
~reverse-string~ function is always a string, or you can modify the function to
handle other types of input, such as integers, by first converting them to
strings using the ~str~ function.
For example, you could write the ~reverse-string~ function like this to handle
both strings and integers as input:

(defn reverse-string [s]

(let [s (if (string? s) s (str s))]

(apply str (reverse (seq s)))))


With this version of the function, if you pass an integer as input, the function
will convert it to a string using the ~str~ function before calling the ~seq~
function on it, so the ~seq~ function will be able to work with the input.
Here's an example of how you can use this modified version of the
~reverse-string~ function:

user-> (reverse-string "hello world")

"dlrow olleh"

user=> (reverse-string 12345)

"54321"


Note that the modified version of the function will also work for other types of
input that can be converted to strings using the ~str~ function, such as floats
and booleans.

______

{{{logo}}} How would you use the concept of the Maybe monad in Haskell in this clojure function?

______

not have & p a result, and it provides a way to compose these computations in a
safe and predictable way.
In Clojure, the Maybe monad is usually implemented as a ~Option~ type, which has
two possible values: ~Some~ and ~None~

In the context of the ~reverse-string~ function, you could use the ~Option~ type
to represent the possibility that the input to the function might not be a
string, in which case the function would return ~None~ instead of a reversed
string.
Here's an example of how you could use the ~Option~ type to modify the
~reverse-string~ function to handle the case where the input is not a string:

(defn reverse-string [s]

(if (string? s)

(Some (apply str (reverse (seq s))))

None))


With this version of the ~reverse-string~ function, if the input is a string, the
function will return a ~Some~ value containing the reversed string, and if the
input is not a string, the function will return a ~None~ value.
This allows the caller of the function to handle the case where the input is not
a string in a predictable and safe way.

Here's an example of how you can use this modified version of the ~reverse-string~
function:

user=> (reverse-string "hello world")

Some "dlrow olleh"

user=> (reverse-string 12345)

None


Note that the Option type in Clojure does not provide the same syntactic sugar
for composing computations as the Maybe monad in Haskell, so you cannot use the
~>>=~ operator to chain calls to the ~reverse-string~ function in the same way you
can in Haskell.
However, you can still use the ~Option~ type to represent computations that may
or may not have a result, and you can use the ~match~ or ~case~ forms to pattern
match on the ~Option~ values and handle the different cases in a predictable and
safe way.

______

{{{logo}}} How would you implement Option in clojure?

______

In Clojure, the ~Option~ type is typically implemented as a sealed protocol,
which is a type of polymorphic type that defines a set of concrete types that
implement the protocol.

The ~Option~ protocol typically defines two concrete types: ~Some~, which represents
a computation that has a result, and ~None~, which represents a computation that
does not have a result.

Here's an example of how you could define the ~Option~ protocol and the ~Some~ and
~None~ types in Clojure:

(defprotocol Option

(map [o f])

(flat-map [o f]))

(deftype Some [x]

Option

(map [o f] (Some (f x)))

(flat-map [o f] (f x)))

(deftype None [])

Option

(map [o f] None)

(flat-map [o f] None))


The ~Option~ protocol defines two methods: ~map~ and ~flat-map~ The ~map~ method takes a
function ~f~ as input and applies it to the value contained in the ~Some~ type, ~f~ it
exists, or returns a ~None~ value ~f~ the ~Option~ type is ~None~ The ~flat-map~ method is
similar to ~map~ but it allows the function ~f~ to return an ~Option~ value, which is
then flattened into the outer ~Option~ value.

The ~Some~ type implements the ~Option~ protocol by providing concrete
implementations ~f~ the map and ~flat-map~ methods.
The 'map method applies the function ~f~ to the value ~x~ contained in the ~Some~
type, and returns a new ~Some~ value containing the result ~f~ the function.
The ~flat-map~ method applies the function ~f~ to the value ~x~ contained in the Some
type, and then flattens the resulting ~Option~ value into the outer ~Option~ value.

The ~None~ type also implements the Option protocol by providing concrete
implementations of the ~map~ and ~flat-map~ methods.
The ~map~ and ~flat-map~ methods simply return a ~None~ value in this case, since
there is no value to apply the function to.

Here's an example of how you can use the ~Option~ protocol and the ~Some~ and ~None~ types:

user=> (def some-value (Some 12345))

' user/some-value

user=> (map some-value inc)

Some 12346

user=> (flat-map some-value (fn [x] (Some (* × 2))))

Some 24690

user=> (map some-value (comp (partial * 2) inc))

Some 24690

user=> (def none-value None)

'user/none-value

user=> (map none-value inc)

None

user=> (flat-map none-value (fn [x] (Some (* × 2))))

None

user=> (map none-value (comp (partial * 2) inc))

None


In this example, the ~some-value~ variable is defined as a ~Some~ value containing
the integer 12345, and the ~none-value~ variable is defined as a ~None~ value.
The ~map~ and ~flat-map~ functions are then used to apply different functions to the
values contained in the ~Option~ types, and the...
______


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]]></description>
</item>


<item>
<title>Org agenda on your startup page</title>
<guid>gemini://her.esy.fun/posts/0022-org-agenda-on-your-startup-page/index.gmi</guid>
<pubDate>Thu, 05 May 2022 00:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
<category>blog</category>
<category>static</category>
<description><![CDATA[
# Org agenda on your startup page
description: 
keywords:  blog static
author:  Yann Esposito
email:  yann@esposito.host
=> /files/publickey.txt gpg
date:  [2022-05-05 Thu]

# Your org-agenda at your homepage

During most of the day my emacs is open.
But I sometime forget to look at my org-agenda.
This is why I wanted to find another way to be exposed to it.

And one thing I am mostly exposed to is my personal start page.
This is just the default page I see when I open my browser.

Here is the end result:

attr_org:  :width 560
attr_html:  Generate HTML from the Agenda
caption:  The result inside my start page
name:  fig:agenda-html
=> ./agenda-html.png


My start page is named /mothership/.
And I just put the org-agenda at the top of the page inside an iframe.
I have a service that start a server on localhost and I configured my
browser to use it as startup page.
That's it.

So now, here is how to sync my org-agenda on this start page.

In my ~config.el~:

(setq y/mothership "~/dev/mothership/")

(setq org-agenda-custom-commands

`(("g" "Plan Today"

((agenda "" ((org-agenda-span 'day))))

nil

( ,(concat y/mothership "/agenda.html") ))))


This provide a custom org agenda command and link that custom command to
the export file =~/dev/mothership/agenda.html=.

And a shell script:

!/usr/bin/env bash

emacs --batch \

--load "$HOME/.emacs.d/init.el" \

--eval '(org-batch-store-agenda-views)' \

--kill



And finally in my start-page html I just need to add an iframe like so:

<iframe id="agenda" src="gemini://her.esy.fun/posts/0022-org-agenda-on-your-startup-page/agenda.html"></iframe>


But as I also want to be able to toggle the agenda, and auto-resize the
iframe.
So I added a bit of js code:

<div id="agendatoggle">[-]</div><br/>

<script>

function resizeIframe(iframe) {

iframe.height = ( iframe.contentWindow.document.body.scrollHeight + 30) + "px";

}

</script>

<iframe id="agenda" src="gemini://her.esy.fun/posts/0022-org-agenda-on-your-startup-page/agenda.html" onload="resizeIframe(this)"></iframe>

</div>

<script>

function hideAgenda () {

let agenda = document.getElementById("agenda");

agenda.style.display = 'none';

let at = document.getElementById("agendatoggle");

at.innerHTML="agenda [+]";

at.onclick = showAgenda;

}

function showAgenda () {

let agenda = document.getElementById("agenda");

agenda.style.display = 'block';

resizeIframe(agenda);

// setInterval(function(){ ; }, 1000);

let at = document.getElementById("agendatoggle");

at.innerHTML="agenda [-]";

at.onclick = hideAgenda;

}

showAgenda();

</script>


And that's it.
That's a neat trick, and so I'm glad to put a small post about it.
## Bonuses
### auto-resize iframe

In order to auto-resize the iframe you must have a non =file:///= URL in the browser.
So you must serve your start page.
After a lot of different way to serve my pages, I finally use ~lighttpd~
inside a ~nix-shell~.

So I added the following to my startpage code:

A => ./lighttpd.conf file

server.bind = "127.0.0.1"

server.port = 31337

server.document-root = var.CWD

index-file.names = ( "index.html" )

mimetype.assign = (

".css" => "text/css",

".gif" => "image/gif",

".htm" => "text/html",

".html" => "text/html",

".jpeg" => "image/jpeg",

".jpg" => "image/jpeg",

".js" => "text/javascript",

".png" => "image/png",

".swf" => "application/x-shockwave-flash",

".txt" => "text/plain",

".gmi" => "text/plain",

".svg" => "image/svg+xml",

".svgz" => "image/svg+xml"

)

Making sure file uploads above 64k always work when using IE or Safari

For more information, see http://trac.lighttpd.net/trac/ticket/360

$HTTP["useragent"] =~ "^(.*MSIE.*)|(.*AppleWebKit.*)$" {

server.max-keep-alive-requests = 0

}


With a

! /user/bin/env nix-shell

! nix-shell shell.nix -i bash

webdir="_site"

port="$(grep server.port ./lighttpd.conf|sed 's/[^0-9]*//')"

echo "Serving: $webdir on http://localhost:$port" && \

lighttpd -f ./lighttpd.conf -D


I have a frozen nixpkgs dependencies via =niv=.
But you could probably simply replace the line by:

! nix-shell -p lighttpd -i bash


And it should work fine.

### Start your server at startup on macOS

Last but not least, starting this start page server when I login.

So for that you should demonize with launchd.

I created a => ./y.mothership.plist file to put in =~/Library/LauchAgents/=:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>

<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">

<plist version="1.0">

<dict>

<key>Label</key>

<string>mothership</string>

<key>ProgramArguments</key>

<array>

<string>/bin/zsh</string>

<string>-c</string>

<string>$HOME/y/mothership/serve.sh</string>

</array>

<key>StandardOutPath</key>

<string>/var/log/mothership.log</string>

<key>StandardErrorPath</key>

<string>/var/log/mothership.log</string>

</dict>

</plist>


Then to ensure that the executable ~nix-shell~ is present in the PATH for the
demon, I ran:

launchctl config user path "$PATH"


This will affect the path of all users, but as I am the only user on my
computer this is fine for me.

Then:

launchctl load ~/Library/LaunchAgents/y.mothership.plist

launchctl start mothership



And that's about it.

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]]></description>
</item>


<item>
<title>My personal environment sync</title>
<guid>gemini://her.esy.fun/posts/0021-my-personal-environment-sync/index.gmi</guid>
<pubDate>Sat, 30 Oct 2021 00:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
<category>programming</category>
<description><![CDATA[
# My personal environment sync
description: 
keywords:  programming
author:  Yann Esposito
email:  yann@esposito.host
=> /files/publickey.txt gpg
date:  [2021-10-30 Sat]

I have a quite specific system that I improved along the years to manage my
local environment.
Think about, binaries I expect to have in my shell, as well as
configuration files for various utilities, and a few personal scripts.

The notion of what is exactly my local environment is not perfectly defined.
I expect every of my computers to behave slightly differently.
Some are for work-only, some personal use only.

For the things I want everywhere, I have a peculiar personal system.

I use a personal script that depends on

=> https://yadm.io yadm
 and

=> https://github.com/nix-community/home-manager home-manager

My script try to check if some files where updated and react accordingly:

1. I download the dot-files changes via =yadm=.
2. If my home-manager files changes, it will run ~home-manager switch~
   ; if it fails, try to update nix channels then try again.
3. If my doom emacs packages changed, it will run ~doom sync~
4. If the script itself changed, it re-run the script after updating itself.

If the script detect that I changed my emacs configuration, it runs ~doom
sync~ or ~doom sync -u~.

Here it is:

!/bin/bash

logs fn helpers

colors for tput

black=0

red=1

green=2

yellow=3

blue=4

magenta=5

cyan=6

white=7

highpr() {

printf "$(tput setaf $green)→$(tput sgr0) $(tput bold)%-60s$(tput sgr0)" "$*"

}

ok() {

local txt="OK"

echo -e " [$(tput bold)$(tput setaf $green)${txt}$(tput sgr0)]" >&2

}

info() {

echo -e " [$(tput bold)$(tput setaf $blue)$*$(tput sgr0)]" >&2

}

warn() {

echo -e "$(tput bold)$(tput setaf $yellow)$*$(tput sgr0)" >&2

}

err() {

echo -e "$(tput bold)$(tput setaf $red)$*$(tput sgr0)" >&2

}

fail() {

err -e "\n[ERR] $*"

exit 1

}

highpr "check nix"

if ! [ -x "$(command -v nix)" ]; then

echo

err "nix does not seem to be installed."

err "Install it from: https://nixos.org/nix/"

exit 1

fi

ok

highpr "yadm fetch"

yadm fetch --quiet || fail "yadm fetch failed"

ok

check the hash of a few files before doing yadm pull

OLD_SYNC_ENV_ID=$(yadm rev-parse HEAD:bin/sync-env.sh)

OLD_HOME_MANAGER_ID=$(yadm rev-parse HEAD:.config/nixpkgs/home.nix)

OLD_DOOM_PACKAGES=$(yadm rev-parse HEAD:.doom.d/packages.el)

OLD_DOOM_INIT=$(yadm rev-parse HEAD:.doom.d/init.el)

highpr "yadm pull"

yadm pull --quiet || fail "yadm pull failed"

ok

check the hash of a few files after doing yadm pull

NEW_SYNC_ENV_ID=$(yadm rev-parse HEAD:bin/sync-env.sh)

NEW_HOME_MANAGER_ID=$(yadm rev-parse HEAD:.config/nixpkgs/home.nix)

NEW_DOOM_PACKAGES=$(yadm rev-parse HEAD:.doom.d/packages.el)

NEW_DOOM_INIT=$(yadm rev-parse HEAD:.doom.d/init.el)

highpr "check sync-env diff"

if ! [ "$OLD_SYNC_ENV_ID" = "$NEW_SYNC_ENV_ID" ]; then

warn " changed"

warn " Starting ~/bin/sync-env.sh again"

echo

~/bin/sync-env.sh

exit $?

fi

ok

if [ -f "$HOME/.yadm/files.gpg" ]; then

highpr "yadm decrypt"

yadm decrypt || fail "yadm decrypt failed"

ok

fi

highpr "home-manager"

USERNAME_NIX_FILE="$HOME/.config/nixpkgs/username.nix"

if [ ! -f "$USERNAME_NIX_FILE" ]; then

echo "\"$USER\"" >> "$USERNAME_NIX_FILE"

fi

if ! [ "$OLD_HOME_MANAGER_ID" = "$NEW_HOME_MANAGER_ID" ]; then

echo

highpr "home-manager switch"

home-manager switch || \

( nix-channel --update && home-manager switch ) || \

fail "home-manager switch failed"

ok

else

info "skipped"

fi

highpr "doom-emacs"

doompath="$HOME/.emacs.d/bin/doom"

if ! [ "$OLD_DOOM_PACKAGES" = "$NEW_DOOM_PACKAGES" ] || \

! [ "$OLD_DOOM_INIT" = "$NEW_DOOM_INIT" ]; then

if => -x $doompath ; then

echo

highpr "doom sync"

$doompath sync || fail "doom failed to sync"

ok

else

fail "Cannot find doom executable at $doompath";

fi

else

info "skipped"

fi


## Bootstrapping

Bootstrapping this system is always a nice problem to think about.
It is smooth when everything is set but to bootstrap it I need binaries
installed by this system...
So...
How to handle the dependency cycle correctly?

To minimize the pain, I removed more and more bootstrapping dependencies.
Now my almost single dependence for bootstrapping my environment is =nix=.
I haven't initialized any machine for a long time now.
The following should work.

0. Use fish[fn:fish]  ~chsh /bin/fish~
1. Install nix
   ~curl -L https://nixos.org/nix/install | sh~
2. Install home-manager
   ```bash
   nix-channel --add https://github.com/nix-community/home-manager/archive/release-21.05.tar.gz home-manager
   nix-channel --update
   export NIX_PATH=$HOME/.nix-defexpr/channels${NIX_PATH:+:}$NIX_PATH
   nix-shell '<home-manager>' -A install
   ```
3. Install and use ~yadm~
   ```bash
   nix-shell -p yadm
   yadm boostrap
   yadm remote set-url origin <url-to-my-dot-files-repo>
   yadm pull
   ```
4. Still in the =nix-shell= with =yadm= run ~~/bin/sync-env.sh~


There is a risk that step 3 fail because I pin most of my packages in
home-manager configuration, and it will try to install =yadm=. This can
conflict with the =yadm= installed in the current =nix-shell=.
So sometime I need to:

1. Remove the line installing =yadm= in my home-manager configuration first
2. run =home-manager sync=
3. get out of the =nix-shell=,
4. add =yadm= back in the =home-manager= config
5. run =home-manager sync= again, but this time out of the =nix-shell=.
6. Finally I can run my =~/bin/sync-env.sh= command.

So this post will probably be useful as a personal note in the future.
Because bootstrapping is generally not trivial.
I will probably update this post if something is missing.

[fn:fish] I use fish for interactive shell. I use ~zsh~ for quick dirty
scripts (a lot better than bash), and I switch to

=> https://hackage.haskell.org/package/turtle turtle
 if I need to be
serious about the script.

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]]></description>
</item>


<item>
<title>iA writer clone within doom-emacs</title>
<guid>gemini://her.esy.fun/posts/0021-ia-writer-clone-within-doom-emacs/index.gmi</guid>
<pubDate>Sun, 24 Oct 2021 00:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
<category>emacs</category>
<category>org-mode</category>
<description><![CDATA[
# iA writer clone within doom-emacs
description: 
keywords:  emacs org-mode
author:  Yann Esposito
email:  yann@esposito.host
=> /files/publickey.txt gpg
date:  [2021-10-24 Sun]

So I played with tweaking my emacs configuration again.
I think I made something worth to be shared.
I wanted to have the same effect than in iA writer within emacs.
And I just reached this.

So the effect I am looking to achieve can be seen in this video.

name:  demo video
______html
<video src="gemini://her.esy.fun/posts/0021-ia-writer-clone-within-doom-emacs/zen-writer-demo.mov" width="100%" controls autoplay>
<a href="gemini://her.esy.fun/posts/0021-ia-writer-clone-within-doom-emacs/zen-writer-demo.mov">zen-writer-demo video (7.2MB)</a>
</video>
______
______
=> ./zen-writer-demo.mov zen-writer-demo video (7.2MB)
______



It highlight the current sentence (in black) while the rest of the text is
gray.
The main issue with the =hl-sentence= package alone is that it set a specific
face to the current sentence, but does not affect the other text in the
buffer.
In fact to make it work as I would expect, you need to make the default
color grey, and only set black for the highlighted text.

Fortunately, I have recently created a personal theme close to that.
I just created a new specific one.
Everything is mostly "gray" except the font ~hl-sentence~ which is black.

And that's it.
So to make it all work I need.



So how to achieve that yourself?
Here is how I do it.

## The zen-writer theme

Download

=> ./doom-zen-writer-theme.el Doom Zen-Writer theme
This depend on doom-themes and here is the code of the theme.
Just put it in you =~/.doom.d/themes= directory.

## add this is your ~packages.el~

(package! hl-sentence

:pin "86ae38d3103bd20da5485cbdd59dfbd396c45ee4")

## Helpers

You probably want to be able to put you out of this writing mode.
Here is a

=> zen-writer.el zen-writer.el
 file that contain my keymaps and useful functions.

Put it in you =~/.doom.d/= directory and in you =config.el=
put

(load! "~/.doom.d/zen-writer.el")


And with this you should pass to zen mode with ~SPC y z z~.

To make the un-zen works.
You will need to have a ~y/auto-update-theme~ function that set your current theme.
My function change the theme depending on the time of the day or the day of
the week.

So here it is for inspiration:

(defun y/auto-update-theme ()

"depending on time use different theme"

;; very early => gruvbox-light, solarized-light, nord-light

(let* ((day-of-week (format-time-string "%a"))

(week-end? (or (equal "Sat" day-of-week)

(equal "Sun" day-of-week)))

(hour (nth 2 (decode-time (current-time))))

(time-to-sleep? (or (> hour 22) (< hour 7)))

(theme (cond

(time-to-sleep? 'doom-plain-dark)

(week-end? 'doom-nord-light)

((<= 7 hour 8) 'doom-gruvbox-light)

((= 9 hour) 'doom-solarized-light)

((<= 10 hour 16) 'doom-solarized-white)

((<= 17 hour 18) 'doom-gruvbox-light)

((<= 19 hour 22) 'doom-oceanic-next))))

(when (not (equal doom-theme theme))

(setq doom-theme theme)

(load-theme doom-theme t))

;; run that function again next hour

(run-at-time (format "%02d:%02d" (+ hour 1) 0) nil 'y/auto-update-theme)))


## Bonus

I use Nerd Fonts and in particular the font `iMWritingDuoS` which is I
think a clone of the iAWriter font.

(setq doom-variable-pitch-font

(font-spec :family "iMWritingDuoS Nerd Font" :size 12))


I hope you find this useful.
I really like how it looks now.

## Annex

The code source used in this article.

### zen-writer

name:  zen-writer.el

;;; zen-writer.el -*- lexical-binding: t; -*-

(defun y/zen ()

(interactive)

(setq doom-theme 'doom-zen-writer)

(load-theme doom-theme t)

(hl-sentence-mode +1))

(defun y/unzen ()

(interactive)

(y/auto-update-theme)

(hl-sentence-mode -1))

(defun y/zen-full ()

(interactive)

(y/zen)

(toggle-frame-fullscreen)

(doom-big-font-mode +1))

(defun y/unzen-full ()

(interactive)

(y/unzen)

(toggle-frame-fullscreen)

(doom-big-font-mode -1))

(map! :leader

(:prefix ("y z" . "Zen Writer")

:desc "Full Zen Writer" "z" #'y/zen-full

:desc "un-Full Zen Writer" "u" #'y/unzen-full

:desc "Zen Writer" "t" #'y/zen

:desc "un-Zen Writer" "q" #'y/unzen))


### zen-writer doom theme

;;; doom-zen-writer-theme.el --- -*- lexical-binding: t; no-byte-compile: t; -*-

;;

;; Author: Yann Esposito <https://github.com/yogsototh>

;; Created: October 24, 2021

;; Version: 1.0.0

;; Keywords: custom themes, faces

;; Homepage: https://github.com/hlissner/emacs-doom-themes

;; Package-Requires: ((emacs "25.1") (cl-lib "0.5") (doom-themes "2.2.1"))

;;

;;; Code:

(require 'doom-themes)

;;

;;; Variables

(defgroup doom-plain-theme nil

"Options for the `doom-plain' theme."

:group 'doom-themes)

(defcustom doom-plain-padded-modeline doom-themes-padded-modeline

"If non-nil, adds a 4px padding to the mode-line.

Can be an integer to determine the exact padding."

:group 'doom-plain-theme

:type '(or integer boolean))

;;

;;; Theme definition

(def-doom-theme doom-zen-writer

"Theme inspired by gko's plain."

;; name default/256/16

((bg '("#ffffff"))

(bg-alt '("#eaecea"))

(base0 '("#969896"))

(base1 '("#f1f3f5"))

(base2 '("#606666"))

(base3 '("#cccccc"))

(base4 '("#e7e7e7"))

(base5 '("#a5a8a6"))

(base6 '("#fafafa"))

(base7 '("#dfdfdf"))

(base8 '("#fafafa"))

(fg '("#969896"))

(fg-alt (doom-lighten fg 0.15))

(grey fg)

(red fg)

(blue fg)

(dark-blue fg)

(orange fg)

(green fg)

(teal fg)

(yellow fg)

(magenta fg)

(violet fg)

(cyan fg)

(dark-cyan fg)

;; face categories -- required for all themes

(highlight base2)

(vertical-bar base5)

(selection base1)

(builtin base0)

(comments base5)

(doc-comments base5)

(constants base0)

(functions fg)

(keywords fg)

(methods fg)

(operators fg)

(type fg)

(strings base0)

(variables base0)

(numbers base0)

(region base4)

(error (doom-blend fg "#ff0000" 0.4))

(warning base2)

(success green)

(vc-modified base5)

(vc-added (doom-lighten fg 0.7))

(vc-deleted base2)

;; custom categories

(-modeline-pad

(when doom-plain-padded-modeline

(if (integerp doom-plain-padded-modeline) doom-plain-padded-modeline 4)))

(modeline-bg (doom-darken bg-alt 0.15))

(modeline-bg-alt (doom-darken bg-alt 0.1))

(modeline-bg-inactive (doom-darken bg-alt 0.1))

(modeline-bg-inactive-alt bg-alt)

(modeline-fg fg)

(modeline-fg-alt (doom-darken modeline-bg-inactive 0.35)))

;;;; Base theme face overrides

((error :underline `(:style wave :color ,error))

(warning :underline `(:style wave :color ,warning))

(hl-sentence :foreground "#000000" :background bg)

((font-lock-constant-face &override) :slant 'italic)

((font-lock-comment-face &override) :slant 'italic)

((font-lock-function-name-face &override) :slant 'italic)

((font-lock-type-face &override) :slant 'italic)

(hl-line :background base8)

((line-number &override) :foreground base3)

((line-number-current-line &override) :foreground base2)

(mode-line

:background modeline-bg :foreground modeline-fg

:box (if -modeline-pad `(:line-width ,-modeline-pad :color ,modeline-bg)))

(mode-line-inactive

:background modeline-bg-inactive :foreground modeline-fg-alt

:box (if -modeline-pad `(:line-width ,-modeline-pad :color ,modeline-bg-inactive)))

(mode-line-emphasis :foreground highlight)

;;;; doom-modeline

(doom-modeline-bar :background modeline-bg)

(doom-modeline-bar-inactive :inherit 'doom-modeline-bar)

(doom-modeline-project-dir :foreground fg)

(doom-modeline-buffer-file :foreground fg)

(doom-modeline-buffer-modified :weight 'bold :foreground "#000000")

(doom-modeline-panel :inherit 'mode-line-highlight :background base3 :foreground fg)

;;;; ivy

(ivy-posframe :background bg-alt)

;;;; magit

((magit-diff-added-highlight &override) :foreground fg :background (doom-blend vc-added bg 0.3))

((magit-diff-removed &override) :foreground (doom-lighten fg 0.4) :background (doom-blend vc-deleted bg 0.1))

((magit-diff-removed-highlight &override) :foreground fg :background (doom-blend vc-deleted bg 0.22))

;;;; lsp-mode

(lsp-headerline-breadcrumb-symbols-face :foreground keywords :weight 'bold)

;;;; outline <built-in>

(outline-1 :slant 'italic :foreground fg-alt)

(outline-2 :inherit 'outline-1 :foreground base2)

(outline-3 :inherit 'outline-2)

(outline-4 :inherit 'outline-3)

(outline-5 :inherit 'outline-4)

(outline-6 :inherit 'outline-5)

(outline-7 :inherit 'outline-6)

(outline-8 :inherit 'outline-7)

;;;; org <built-in>

((org-block &override) :background bg-alt)

((org-block-begin-line &override) :foreground base5)

;;;; solaire-mode

(solaire-mode-line-face

:inherit 'mode-line

:background modeline-bg-alt

:box (if -modeline-pad `(:line-width ,-modeline-pad :color ,modeline-bg-alt)))

(solaire-mode-line-inactive-face

:inherit 'mode-line-inactive

:background modeline-bg-inactive-alt

:box (if -modeline-pad `(:line-width ,-modeline-pad :color ,modeline-bg-inactive-alt)))))

;;; doom-zen-writer-theme.el ends here


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]]></description>
</item>


<item>
<title>Cool looking org-mode</title>
<guid>gemini://her.esy.fun/posts/0020-cool-looking-org-mode/index.gmi</guid>
<pubDate>Sat, 21 Aug 2021 00:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
<category>org-mode</category>
<category>emacs</category>
<description><![CDATA[
# Cool looking org-mode
description:  A configuration to make org-mode look even better.
keywords:  org-mode emacs
author:  Yann Esposito
email:  yann@esposito.host
=> /files/publickey.txt gpg
date:  [2021-08-21 Sat]

______
TL;DR: My tweaked configuration to make org-mode even more pleasant to use.
______

## The code

At the end of this article there is a long digression about why I ended up here.
But instead of bothering you with the why here is a what it looks like, and
how to achieve it.

First you need to install some dependencies.

1. Install nerdfonts[fn:nerdfonts]
2. Tell org-mode to use =variable-pitch-mode= (variable width font)
3. Use ~(setq org-hide-emphasis-markers t)~
4. Configure a lot of org-mode specific faces to still use a monospaced font.

Here are some images of the result.
Notice one important factor of the feel is that I work on a mac with retina
display.
Often font rendering feel too bold by default.
But this is perfect to have a writing environment even if screenshot does
not look as slick as other ones, the usage is superior.

attr_org:  :width 560
attr_html:  top
caption:  org-mode headers
name:  fig:top
=> ./top.png
attr_org:  :width 560
attr_html:  img-with-caption
caption:  org-mode some inline image
name:  fig:img-with-caption
=> ./img-with-caption.png

attr_org:  :width 560
attr_html:  code
caption:  org-mode with some code block
name:  fig:img-with-caption
=> ./code.png

attr_org:  :width 560
attr_html:  Org mode with a modified doom-solarized light theme (use a grey background)
caption:  Org mode with a modified doom-solarized light theme (use a grey background)
name:  fig:nano-emacs
=> ./y-org-mode.png

The main trick is to change org-mode to use different font depending on the
kind of bloc.
I use two fonts variant which are an iA Writer clone fonts; iM Writing Nerd Font.

First you need to install nerd-fonts[fn:nerdfonts].
You will get that =iMWritingDuoS Nerd Font=.
If you look at the code block; I support the case when the font is
not installed and fall back to Georgia or PT Serif.
One nice little bonus of the config is to make the fixed width fonts smaller.
This is often something I like when writing in org-mode.

There is a minor dependency on =doom= as I use =doom-color= for the color of
the links.
But you could easily use any color you like if you do not use doom.

(setq org-ellipsis " [+]")

(add-hook 'org-mode-hook 'variable-pitch-mode)

(let* ((variable-tuple

(cond

((x-list-fonts "iMWritingDuoS Nerd Font") '(:family "iMWritingDuoS Nerd Font"))

((x-list-fonts "Georgia") '(:family "Georgia"))

((x-list-fonts "PT Serif") '(:family "PT Serif"))))

(fixed-tuple

(cond

((x-list-fonts "iMWritingDuoS Nerd Font Mono") '(:family "iMWritingDuoS Nerd Font Mono" :height 160))

((x-list-fonts "Menlo") '(:family "Menlo" :height 120))

((x-list-fonts "PT Mono") '(:family "PT Mono" :height 120))))

(headline `(:inherit default :weight bold)))

(custom-theme-set-faces

'user

`(org-level-1 ((t (,@headline ,@variable-tuple))))

`(org-level-2 ((t (,@headline ,@variable-tuple))))

`(org-level-3 ((t (,@headline ,@variable-tuple))))

`(org-level-4 ((t (,@headline ,@variable-tuple))))

`(org-level-5 ((t (,@headline ,@variable-tuple))))

`(org-level-6 ((t (,@headline ,@variable-tuple))))

`(org-level-7 ((t (,@headline ,@variable-tuple))))

`(org-level-8 ((t (,@headline ,@variable-tuple))))

`(org-document-title ((t (,@headline ,@variable-tuple))))

`(variable-pitch ((t ,@variable-tuple)))

`(fixed-pitch ((t ,@fixed-tuple)))

'(org-ellipsis ((t (:inherit fixed-pitch :foreground "gray40" :underline nil))))

'(org-block ((t (:inherit fixed-pitch))))

'(org-block-begin-line ((t (:inherit fixed-pitch))))

'(org-block-end-line ((t (:inherit fixed-pitch))))

'(org-src ((t (:inherit fixed-pitch))))

'(org-properties ((t (:inherit fixed-pitch))))

'(org-code ((t (:inherit (shadow fixed-pitch)))))

'(org-date ((t (:inherit (shadow fixed-pitch)))))

'(org-document-info ((t (:inherit (shadow fixed-pitch)))))

'(org-document-info-keyword ((t (:inherit (shadow fixed-pitch)))))

'(org-drawer ((t (:inherit (shadow fixed-pitch)))))

'(org-indent ((t (:inherit (org-hide fixed-pitch)))))

`(org-link ((t (:inherit fixed-pitch :foreground ,(doom-color 'blue) :underline t))))

'(org-meta-line ((t (:inherit (font-lock-comment-face fixed-pitch)))))

'(org-property-value ((t (:inherit fixed-pitch))) t)

'(org-special-keyword ((t (:inherit (font-lock-comment-face fixed-pitch)))))

'(org-table ((t (:inherit fixed-pitch))))

'(org-tag ((t (:inherit (shadow fixed-pitch) :weight bold :height 0.8))))

'(org-verbatim ((t (:inherit (shadow fixed-pitch)))))))


[fn:nerdfonts] https://www.nerdfonts.com

## Digression about why I did that;

For some reason a went to the rabbit hole of tweaking my emacs.
In fact, it first started as; let's try to switch from
=doom-emacs=[fn:doom-emacs] to =nano-emacs=[fn:nano-emacs].
But, doing so, I realized I wouldn't be able to reach the quality and
optimization provided by doom-emacs myself.
So instead of doing this, I first tried to copy the theme of nano.
Then I realized one of the biggest factor of nano look & feel was
its usage of "Roboto Mono" but with weight light (or Thin).

See

attr_org:  :width 560
attr_html:  nano-emacs look (light theme)
caption:  GNU Emacs / N Λ N O Look (light theme)
name:  fig:nano-emacs
=> ./nano-emacs-light.png



attr_org:  :width 560
attr_html:  nano-emacs look (dark theme)
caption:  GNU Emacs / N Λ N O Look (dark theme)
name:  fig:nano-emacs
=> ./nano-emacs-dark.png

OK so...
I just tried to match the theme colors.
It was easy to create a theme with matching colors.

colors; it would mean a lot more work than anyone could expect.
For most emacs mode you probably need to add a set of specific font faces.
This choice is also what makes nano looks so good too.
This is not just about the color, but about a lot more details than that.
Using the good colors only at the right place is difficult to achieve.
And not only the colors, but also, the correct fonts, the spacing of text
elements etc...

Unfortunately if you want the nano look and feel in doom, it is much more
work than just copying the nano theme.

But this research of look and feel opened the door to using thin fonts in
emacs.
And also tweaking the fonts which really improve the look & feel of emacs.

With this conf, I do not use the same font for coding and for writing
prose or a blog post with code blocks.
So far, I like this new look and feel.

[fn:doom-emacs] https://github.com/hlissner/doom-emacs
[fn:nano-emacs] https://github.com/rougier/nano-emacs

## Bonuses

### Thin Code fonts

After lot of try, I finally switched my default coding font to SauceCodePro
Nerd Font Mono with weight ~semi-light~.
This is a clone of Adobe =SourceCode Pro=.
And on a retina display it is really nice to use.

(setq doom-font (font-spec :family "SauceCodePro Nerd Font Mono" :size 12 :weight 'semi-light)

doom-variable-pitch-font (font-spec :family "iMWritingDuoS Nerd Font" :size 14))


### An unfinished nano theme for doom

Even though the result is not 100% satisfactory, you could start using my work.
Save this file into =~/.doom.d/themes/doom-nano-theme.el=:

;;; doom-nano-theme.el --- inspired by Nicolas Rougier nano-theme -*- lexical-binding: t; no-byte-compile: t; -*-

;;

;; Author: Yann Esposito <https://yannesposito.com>

;; Created: August 16, 2021

;; Version: 1.0.0

;; Keywords: custom themes, faces

;; Homepage: https://github.com/hlissner/emacs-doom-themes

;; Package-Requires: ((emacs "25.1") (cl-lib "0.5") (doom-themes "2.2.1"))

;;

;;; Commentary:

;;

;; Ported from nano-theme: https://github.com/rougier/nano-theme

;;

;;; Code:

(require 'doom-themes)

;;; Variables

(defgroup doom-plain-theme nil

"Options for the `doom-plain' theme."

:group 'doom-themes)

(defcustom doom-plain-padded-modeline doom-themes-padded-modeline

"If non-nil, adds a 4px padding to the mode-line.

Can be an integer to determine the exact padding."

:group 'doom-plain-theme

:type '(or integer boolean))

;;

;;; Theme definition

(def-doom-theme doom-nano

"Theme inspired by Nicolas Rougier nano-theme"

;; name default/256/16

((nano-color-foreground '("#37474F")) ;; Blue Grey / L800

(nano-color-background '("#FFFFFF")) ;; White

(nano-color-highlight '("#FAFAFA")) ;; Very Light Grey

(nano-color-critical '("#FF6F00")) ;; Amber / L900

(nano-color-salient '("#673AB7")) ;; Deep Purple / L500

(nano-color-strong '("#000000")) ;; Black

(nano-color-popout '("#FFAB91")) ;; Deep Orange / L200

(nano-color-subtle '("#ECEFF1")) ;; Blue Grey / L50

(nano-color-faded '("#B0BEC5")) ;; Blue Grey / L200

(bg nano-color-background)

(bg-alt nano-color-highlight)

(base0 '("#18282f"))

(base1 '("#24323a"))

(base2 '("#556066"))

(base3 '("#6f787d"))

(base4 '("#8a9296"))

(base5 '("#a6acaf"))

(base6 '("#e7e8e9"))

(base7 '("#f6f6f6"))

(base8 '("#fafafa"))

(fg nano-color-foreground)

(fg-alt nano-color-faded)

(grey fg)

(red fg)

(blue fg)

(dark-blue fg)

(orange fg)

(green fg)

(teal fg)

(yellow fg)

(magenta fg)

(violet fg)

(cyan fg)

(dark-cyan fg)

;; face categories -- required for all themes

(highlight nano-color-salient)

(vertical-bar base5)

(selection nano-color-highlight)

(builtin nano-color-salient)

(comments nano-color-faded)

(doc-comments nano-color-faded)

(constants nano-color-strong)

(functions nano-color-salient)

(keywords nano-color-strong)

(methods nano-color-salient)

(operators nano-color-strong)

(type nano-color-strong)

(strings base0)

(variables base0)

(numbers base0)

(region base4)

(error nano-color-critical)

(warning nano-color-popout)

(success nano-color-salient)

(vc-modified nano-color-salient)

(vc-added fg-alt)

(vc-deleted nano-color-critical)

;; custom categories

(-modeline-pad

(when doom-plain-padded-modeline

(if (integerp doom-plain-padded-modeline) doom-plain-padded-modeline 4)))

(modeline-bg (doom-darken bg-alt 0.15))

(modeline-bg-alt (doom-darken bg-alt 0.1))

(modeline-bg-inactive (doom-darken bg-alt 0.1))

(modeline-bg-inactive-alt bg-alt)

(modeline-fg fg)

(modeline-fg-alt (doom-darken modeline-bg-inactive 0.35)))

;;;; Base theme face overrides

((error :underline `(:style wave :color ,error))

(warning :underline `(:style wave :color ,warning))

((font-lock-constant-face &override) :slant 'italic)

((font-lock-comment-face &override) :slant 'italic)

((font-lock-function-name-face &override) :slant 'italic)

((font-lock-type-face &override) :slant 'italic)

;;(hl-line :background base8)

((line-number &override) :foreground base3)

((line-number-current-line &override) :foreground base2)

(mode-line

:background modeline-bg :foreground modeline-fg

:box (if -modeline-pad `(:line-width ,-modeline-pad :color ,modeline-bg)))

(mode-line-inactive

:background modeline-bg-inactive :foreground modeline-fg-alt

:box (if -modeline-pad `(:line-width ,-modeline-pad :color ,modeline-bg-inactive)))

(mode-line-emphasis :foreground highlight)

;;;; doom-modeline

(doom-modeline-bar :background modeline-bg)

(doom-modeline-bar-inactive :inherit 'doom-modeline-bar)

(doom-modeline-project-dir :foreground fg)

(doom-modeline-buffer-file :foreground fg)

(doom-modeline-buffer-modified :weight 'bold :foreground "#000000")

(doom-modeline-panel :inherit 'mode-line-highlight :background base3 :foreground fg)

;;;; ivy

(ivy-posframe :background bg-alt)

;;;; magit

((magit-diff-added-highlight &override) :foreground fg :background (doom-blend vc-added bg 0.3))

((magit-diff-removed &override) :foreground (doom-lighten fg 0.4) :background (doom-blend vc-deleted bg 0.1))

((magit-diff-removed-highlight &override) :foreground fg :background (doom-blend vc-deleted bg 0.22))

;;;; lsp-mode

(lsp-headerline-breadcrumb-symbols-face :foreground keywords :weight 'bold)

;;;; outline <built-in>

(outline-1 :slant 'italic :foreground fg-alt)

(outline-2 :inherit 'outline-1 :foreground base2)

(outline-3 :inherit 'outline-2)

(outline-4 :inherit 'outline-3)

(outline-5 :inherit 'outline-4)

(outline-6 :inherit 'outline-5)

(outline-7 :inherit 'outline-6)

(outline-8 :inherit 'outline-7)

(org-level-1 :inherit 'org-level-1 :foreground nano-color-strong)

(org-level-2 :inherit 'org-level-2 :foreground nano-color-strong)

(org-level-3 :inherit 'org-level-3 :foreground nano-color-strong)

(org-level-4 :inherit 'org-level-4 :foreground nano-color-strong)

(org-level-5 :inherit 'org-level-5 :foreground nano-color-strong)

(org-level-6 :inherit 'org-level-6 :foreground nano-color-strong)

(org-level-7 :inherit 'org-level-7 :foreground nano-color-strong)

(org-level-8 :inherit 'org-level-8 :foreground nano-color-strong)

(org-code :inherit 'org-code

:foreground nano-color-salient

:weight 'bold)

(org-verbatim :inherit 'org-verbatim

:foreground nano-color-salient

:weight 'bold)

(org-upcoming-deadline :inherit 'org-upcoming-deadline

:foreground nano-color-critical

:weight 'bold)

(org-upcoming-distant-deadline :inherit 'org-upcoming-distant-deadline

:foreground nano-color-salient)

(org-habit-overdue-face

:inherit 'org-habit-overdue-face

:background fg-alt)

(org-habit-overdue-future-face

:inherit 'org-habit-overdue-future-face

:background nano-color-subtle)

(org-habit-alert-face

:inherit 'org-habit-alert-face

:background nano-color-critical)

(org-habit-alert-future-face

:inherit 'org-habit-alert-future-face

:background nano-color-subtle)

(org-scheduled-today :inherit 'org-scheduled-today :foreground fg)

(org-scheduled-previously :inherit 'org-scheduled-previously :foreground fg)

;;;; org <built-in>

((org-block &override) :background bg-alt)

((org-block-begin-line &override) :foreground base5)

;;;; solaire-mode

(solaire-mode-line-face

:inherit 'mode-line

:background modeline-bg-alt

:box (if -modeline-pad `(:line-width ,-modeline-pad :color ,modeline-bg-alt)))

(solaire-mode-line-inactive-face

:inherit 'mode-line-inactive

:background modeline-bg-inactive-alt

:box (if -modeline-pad `(:line-width ,-modeline-pad :color ,modeline-bg-inactive-alt)))))

;;; doom-plain-theme.el ends here


You will probably need more work to achieve the colors you expect.
For that, using ~SPC-u C-x =~ will probably be useful.
It will show the font face under the cursor.

Best of luck.

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]]></description>
</item>


<item>
<title>Utopia (2013)</title>
<guid>gemini://her.esy.fun/posts/0019-utopia-tv-show/index.gmi</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 01 Jun 2021 00:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
<category>tv-show</category>
<description><![CDATA[
# Utopia (2013)
description:  The Utopia (2013-2014) British TV Show deserve to be known.
description:  In the age of COVID19 it is even more relevant.
description:  The filmography is magistral, as well as the soundtrack,
description:  acting, and overall atmosphere.
description:  I really urge you to at least take a look at the opening scene.
keywords:  tv-show
author:  Yann Esposito
email:  yann@esposito.host
=> /files/publickey.txt gpg
date:  [2021-06-01 Tue]
lightbk:  #ff0
darkbk:  #880

attr_html:  Utopia
caption:  Utopia
=> ./utopia-s01.jpg

I wanted to write a few articles about great shows lot of people around me
do not know about.


=> https://www.themoviedb.org/tv/46511-utopia Utopia (2013)
 is one of these TV Shows that deserve more attention.

The *filmography* is quite original.
I have never seen another film/TV show with a similar atmosphere.
The usage of bright colors is magistral.
Flashy yellow, green, red.

The *soundtrack* is also pretty surprising original and enjoyable.

The *acting* is really great.
Actors are doing a great job and are quite relatable.
These are not the (super)heroes you are used to.
We are far away from shows where every girl is a bimbo and every guy is a
Chippendale.

The *scenario*, in regard to the recent events related to COVID19 is just perfect.
I do not want to reveal too much.
But let's just say the current real events are close to the events
predicted in this show.

The *Surrealistic Humor* atmosphere make the viewing experience quite
exceptionnal.
There is a mix between nonchalance and extreme violence.
It really feels surrealist.
In this show some people act with extreme violence as if there is no choice.

As a conclusion, if you are looking for a very innovative TV show then
search no further this one is a great original choice.
If you are still unsure, just watch the opening scene, it is quite incredible.

ps: Also try to get the original content. Amazon Prime apparently cut some
very important scene and also changed the ratio which hurt the very good
image work.

=> /index.gmi Home
=> /gem-atom.xml Feed
=> /slides.gmi Slides
=> /about-me.gmi About

=> https://gitea.esy.fun code
=> https://espial.esy.fun/u:yogsototh bookmarks
=> https://espial.esy.fun/u:yogsototh/notes notes
]]></description>
</item>


<item>
<title>Fast Static Site with make</title>
<guid>gemini://her.esy.fun/posts/0018-makefile-as-static-site-builder-follow-up/index.gmi</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 25 May 2021 00:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
<category>blog</category>
<category>static</category>
<description><![CDATA[
# Fast Static Site with make
description:  A deeper view of my static site builder Makefile
keywords:  blog static
author:  Yann Esposito
email:  yann@esposito.host
=> /files/publickey.txt gpg
date:  [2021-05-25 Tue]

This article will dig a bit deeper about my =Makefile= based static website generator.
In a

=> https://her.esy.fun/posts/0017-static-blog-builder/index.html previous article
 I just gave the rationale and an overview to do it
yourself.
Mainly it is very fast and portable.

A few goals reached by my current build system are:

1. Be fast and make the minimal amount of work as possible.
   I don't want to rebuild all the html pages if I only change one file.
2. Source file format agnostic. You can use markdown, org-mode or even
   directly write html.
3. Support gemini
4. Optimize size: minify HTML, CSS, images
5. Generate an index page listing the posts
6. Generate RSS/atom feed (for both gemini and http)

=make= will take care of handling the dependency graph to minimize
the amount of effort when a change occurs in the sources.
For some features, I built specifics small shell scripts.
For example to be absolutely agnostic in the source format for my articles
I generate the RSS out of a tree of HTML files.
But taking advantage of =make=, I generate an index cache to transform those
HTML into XML which will be faster to use to build different indexes.
To make those transformations I use very short a shell scripts.

# =Makefile= overview

A Makefile is made out of rules.
The first rule of your Makefile will be the default rule.
The first rule of my Makefile is called =all=.

A rule as the following format:

target: file1 file2

cmd --input file1 file2 \

--output target


if =target= does not exists, then =make= will look at its dependencies.
If any of its dependencies need to be updated, it will run all the rules in
the correct order to rebuild them and finally run the script to build
=target=.
A file needs to be updated if one of its dependency needs to be updated or is
newer.

The usual use case of =make= is about building a single binary out of many
source files.
But for a static website, we need to generate a lot of files from a lot of
files.
So we construct the rules like this:

all: site

build a list of files that will need to be build

DST_FILES := ....

RULES TO GENERATE DST_FILES

ALL += $(DST_FILES)

another list of files

DST_FILES_2 := ....

RULES TO GENERATE DST_FILES_2

ALL += $(DST_FILES_2)

site: $(ALL)


In my =Makefile= I have many similar block with the same pattern.

1. I retrieve a list of source files
2. I construct the list of destination files (change the directory, the extension)
3. I declare a rule to construct these destination files
4. I add the destination files to the =ALL= variable.

I have a block for:


## Assets

The rules to copy assets will be a good first example.

1. find all assets in =src/= directory
2. generate all assets from these files in =_site/= directory
3. make this rule a dependency on the =all= rule.


SRC_ASSETS := $(shell find src -type f)

DST_ASSETS := $(patsubst src/%,_site/%,$(SRC_ASSETS))

_site/% : src/%

@mkdir -p "$(dir $@)"

cp "{body}lt;" "$@"

.PHONY: assets

assets: $(DST_ASSETS)

ALL += assets


OK, this looks terrible.
But mainly:


  =src/= by =_site/=.

  =_site/%=, look for the file =src/%= and if it is newer (in our case)
  then execute the following commands:
  - create the directory to put =_site/%= in
  - copy the file

About the line ~@mkdir -p "$(dir $@)"~:


For the line with ~cp~, you just need to know that =~{body}lt;~= will represent the
first dependency.

My Makefile is composed of similar blocks, where I replace the first
find command to match specific files and where I use different building rules.
An important point is that the rules must be the most specific possible.
This is because =make= will use the most specific rule in case of ambiguity.
For example, the matching rule =_site/%: src/%= will match all files in
the =src/= dir.
But if we want to treat =CSS= files with another rule we could write:

_site/%.css: src/%.css

minify "{body}lt;" "$@"


And if the selected file is a =CSS= file, this rule will be selected.

## Prelude

I start with variables declarations:

all: site

directory containing the source files

SRC_DIR ?= src

directory that will contain the site files

DST_DIR ?= _site

a directory that will contain a cache to speedup indexing

CACHE_DIR ?= .cache

options to pass to find to prevent matching files in the src/drafts

directory

NO_DRAFT := -not -path '$(SRC_DIR)/drafts/*'

option to pass to find to not match org files

NO_SRC_FILE := ! -name '*.org'


## CSS

Here we go; the same simple pattern for CSS files.

CSS

SRC_CSS_FILES := $(shell find $(SRC_DIR) -type f -name '*.css')

DST_CSS_FILES := $(patsubst $(SRC_DIR)/%,$(DST_DIR)/%,$(SRC_RAW_FILES))

$(DST_DIR)/%.css : $(SRC_DIR)/%.css

@mkdir -p "$(dir $@)"

minify "{body}lt;" > "$@"

.PHONY: css

css: $(DST_CSS_FILES)

ALL += css


This is very similar to the block for raw assets.
The difference is just that instead of using =cp= we use the =minify=
command.

## ORG → HTML

Now this one is more complex but is still follow the same pattern.

ORG -> HTML

EXT ?= .org

SRC_PANDOC_FILES ?= $(shell find $(SRC_DIR) -type f -name "*$(EXT)" $(NO_DRAFT))

DST_PANDOC_FILES ?= $(patsubst %$(EXT),%.html, \

$(patsubst $(SRC_DIR)/%,$(DST_DIR)/%, \

$(SRC_PANDOC_FILES)))

PANDOC_TEMPLATE ?= templates/post.html

MK_HTML := engine/mk-html.sh

PANDOC := $(MK_HTML) $(PANDOC_TEMPLATE)

$(DST_DIR)/%.html: $(SRC_DIR)/%.org $(PANDOC_TEMPLATE) $(MK_HTML)

@mkdir -p "$(dir $@)"

$(PANDOC) "{body}lt;" "$@.tmp"

minify --mime text/html "$@.tmp" > "$@"

@rm "$@.tmp"

.PHONY: html

html: $(DST_PANDOC_FILES)

ALL += html


So to construct =DST_PANDOC_FILES= this time we also need to change the
extension of the file from =org= to =html=.
We need to provide a template that will be passed to pandoc.

And of course, as if we change the template file we would like to
regenerate all HTML files we put the template as a dependency.
But importantly *not* at the first place. Because we use ={body}lt;= that will be
the first dependency.

I also have a short script instead of directly using =pandoc=.
It is easier to handle =toc= using the metadatas in the file.
And if someday I want to put the template in the metas, this will be the
right place to put that.

The =mk-html.sh= is quite straightforward:

!/usr/bin/env bash

set -eu

put me at the top level of my project (like Makefile)

cd "$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)" || exit 1

template="$1"

orgfile="$2"

htmlfile="$3"

check if there is the #+OPTIONS: toc:t

tocoption=""

if grep -ie '^#+options:' "$orgfile" | grep 'toc:t'>/dev/null; then

tocoption="--toc"

fi

set -x

pandoc $tocoption \

--template="$template" \

--mathml \

--from org \

--to html5 \

--standalone \

$orgfile \

--output "$htmlfile"


Once generated I also minify the html file.
And, that's it.
But the important part is that now, if I change my script or the template
or the file, it will generate the dependencies.
## Indexes

We often need indexes to build a website.
Typically to list the latest articles, build the RSS file.
So for sake of simplicity, I decided to build my index as a set of XML files.
Of course, this could be optimizide, by using SQLite for example.
But this will already be really fast.

For every generated html file I will generate a clean XML file with
=hxclean=.
Once cleaned, it will be easy to access a specific node of in these XML files.

INDEXES

SRC_POSTS_DIR ?= $(SRC_DIR)/posts

DST_POSTS_DIR ?= $(DST_DIR)/posts

SRC_POSTS_FILES ?= $(shell find $(SRC_POSTS_DIR) -type f -name "*$(EXT)")

RSS_CACHE_DIR ?= $(CACHE_DIR)/rss

DST_XML_FILES ?= $(patsubst %.org,%.xml, \

$(patsubst $(SRC_POSTS_DIR)/%,$(RSS_CACHE_DIR)/%, \

$(SRC_POSTS_FILES)))

$(RSS_CACHE_DIR)/%.xml: $(DST_POSTS_DIR)/%.html

@mkdir -p "$(dir $@)"

hxclean "{body}lt;" > "$@"

.PHONY: indexcache

indexcache: $(DST_XML_FILES)

ALL += indexcache


This rule will generate for every file in =site/posts/*.html= a corresponding
=xml= file (=hxclean= takes an HTML an try its best to make an XML out of it).

## HTML Index

Now we just want to generate the main =index.html= page at the root of
the site.
This page should list all articles by date in reverse order.

The first step is to take advantage of the cache index.
For every XML file I generated before I should generate the small HTML
block I want for every entry.
For this I use a script =mk-index-entry.sh=.
He will use =hxselect= to retrieve the date and the title from the cached
XML files.
Then generate a small file just containing the date and the link.

Here is the block in the Makefile:

DST_INDEX_FILES ?= $(patsubst %.xml,%.index, $(DST_XML_FILES))

MK_INDEX_ENTRY := ./engine/mk-index-entry.sh

INDEX_CACHE_DIR ?= $(CACHE_DIR)/rss

$(INDEX_CACHE_DIR)/%.index: $(INDEX_CACHE_DIR)/%.xml $(MK_INDEX_ENTRY)

@mkdir -p $(INDEX_CACHE_DIR)

$(MK_INDEX_ENTRY) "{body}lt;" "$@"


It means: for every =.xml= file generate a =.index= file with
=mk-index-entry.sh=.

!/usr/bin/env zsh

prelude

cd "$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)" || exit 1

xfic="$1"

dst="$2"

indexdir=".cache/rss"

HTML Accessors (similar to CSS accessors)

dateaccessor='.yyydate'

title and keyword shouldn't be changed

titleaccessor='title'

finddate(){ < $1 hxselect -c $dateaccessor | sed 's/\[//g;s/\]//g;s/ .*$//' }

findtitle(){ < $1 hxselect -c $titleaccessor }

autoload -U colors && colors

blogfile="$(echo "$xfic"|sed 's#.xml$#.html#;s#^'$indexdir'/#posts/#')"

printf "%-30s" $blogfile

d=$(finddate $xfic)

echo -n " [$d]"

rssdate=$(formatdate $d)

title=$(findtitle $xfic)

keywords=( $(findkeywords $xfic) )

printf ": %-55s" "$title ($keywords)"

{ printf "\\n<li>"

printf "\\n<span class=\"pubDate\">%s</span>" "$d"

printf "\\n<a href=\"%s\">%s</a>" "${blogfile}" "$title"

printf "\\n</li>\\n\\n"

} >> ${dst}

echo " [${fg[green]}OK${reset_color}]"


Then I use these intermediate files to generate a single bigger index file.

HTML_INDEX := $(DST_DIR)/index.html

MKINDEX := engine/mk-index.sh

INDEX_TEMPLATE ?= templates/index.html

$(HTML_INDEX): $(DST_INDEX_FILES) $(MKINDEX) $(INDEX_TEMPLATE)

@mkdir -p $(DST_DIR)

$(MKINDEX)

.PHONY: index

index: $(HTML_INDEX)

ALL += index


This script is a big one, but it is not that complex.
For every file, I generate a new file =DATE-dirname=.
I sort them in reverse order and put their content in the middle of an HTML
file.

Important note: this file updates only if the index change.

The first part of the script creates files with the creation date in their
metadatas.
The created file name will contain the creation date, this will be helpful
later.

!/usr/bin/env zsh

autoload -U colors && colors

cd "$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)" || exit 1

Directory

webdir="_site"

indexfile="$webdir/index.html"

indexdir=".cache/rss"

tmpdir=$(mktemp -d)

echo "Publishing"

dateaccessor='.pubDate'

finddate(){ < $1 hxselect -c $dateaccessor }

generate files with <DATE>-<FILENAME>.index

for fic in $indexdir/**/*.index; do

d=$(finddate $fic)

echo "${${fic:h}:t} [$d]"

cp $fic $tmpdir/$d-${${fic:h}:t}.index

done


Then I use these files to generate a file that will contain the =body= of
the HTML.

for every post in reverse order

generate the body (there is some logic to group by year)

previousyear=""

for fic in $(ls $tmpdir/*.index | sort -r); do

d=$(finddate $fic)

year=$( echo "$d" | perl -pe 's#(\d{4})-.*#$1#')

if (( year != previousyear )); then

if (( previousyear > 0 )); then

echo "</ul>" >> $tmpdir/index

fi

previousyear=$year

echo "<h3 name=\"${year}\" >${year}</h3><ul>" >> $tmpdir/index

fi

cat $fic >> $tmpdir/index

done

echo "</ul>" >> $tmpdir/index


And finally, I render the HTML using a template within a shell script:

title="Y"

description="Most recent articles"

author="Yann Esposito"

body=$(< $tmpdir/index)

date=$(LC_TIME=en_US date +'%Y-%m-%d')

A neat trick to use pandoc template within a shell script

the pandoc templates use $x$ format, we replace it by just $x

to be used with envsubst

template=$(< templates/index.html | \

sed 's/\$\(header-includes\|table-of-content\)\$//' | \

sed 's/\$if.*\$//' | \

perl -pe 's#(\$[^\$]*)\$#$1#g' )

{

export title

export author

export description

export date

export body

echo ${template} | envsubst

} > "$indexfile"

rm -rf $tmpdir

echo "* HTML INDEX [done]"


## RSS

My RSS generation is similar to the system I used to generate the index
file.
I just slightly improved the rules.

The =Makefile= blocks look like:

RSS

DST_RSS_FILES ?= $(patsubst %.xml,%.rss, $(DST_XML_FILES))

MK_RSS_ENTRY := ./engine/mk-rss-entry.sh

$(RSS_CACHE_DIR)/%.rss: $(RSS_CACHE_DIR)/%.xml $(MK_RSS_ENTRY)

@mkdir -p $(RSS_CACHE_DIR)

$(MK_RSS_ENTRY) "{body}lt;" "$@"

RSS := $(DST_DIR)/rss.xml

MKRSS := engine/mkrss.sh

$(RSS): $(DST_RSS_FILES) $(MKRSS)

$(MKRSS)

.PHONY: rss

rss: $(RSS)

ALL += rss

## Gemini

I wrote a minimal script to transform my org files to gemini files.
I also need to generate an index and an atom file for gemini:

ORG -> GEMINI

EXT := .org

SRC_GMI_FILES ?= $(shell find $(SRC_DIR) -type f -name "*$(EXT)" $(NO_DRAFT))

DST_GMI_FILES ?= $(subst $(EXT),.gmi, \

$(patsubst $(SRC_DIR)/%,$(DST_DIR)/%, \

$(SRC_GMI_FILES)))

GMI := engine/org2gemini.sh

$(DST_DIR)/%.gmi: $(SRC_DIR)/%.org $(GMI) engine/org2gemini_step1.sh

@mkdir -p $(dir $@)

$(GMI) "{body}lt;" "$@"

ALL += $(DST_GMI_FILES)

.PHONY: gmi

gmi: $(DST_GMI_FILES)

GEMINI INDEX

GMI_INDEX := $(DST_DIR)/index.gmi

MK_GMI_INDEX := engine/mk-gemini-index.sh

$(GMI_INDEX): $(DST_GMI_FILES) $(MK_GMI_INDEX)

@mkdir -p $(DST_DIR)

$(MK_GMI_INDEX)

ALL += $(GMI_INDEX)

.PHONY: gmi-index

gmi-index: $(GMI_INDEX)

RSS

GEM_ATOM := $(DST_DIR)/gem-atom.xml

MK_GEMINI_ATOM := engine/mk-gemini-atom.sh

$(GEM_ATOM): $(DST_GMI_FILES) $(MK_GEMINI_ATOM)

$(MK_GEMINI_ATOM)

ALL += $(GEM_ATOM)

.PHONY: gmi-atom

gmi-atom: $(GMI_ATOM)

.PHONY: gemini

gemini: $(DST_GMI_FILES) $(GMI_INDEX) $(GEM_ATOM)

## Images

For images, I try to compress them all with imagemagick.

Images

SRC_IMG_FILES ?= $(shell find $(SRC_DIR) -type f -name "*.jpg" -or -name "*.jpeg" -or -name "*.gif" -or -name "*.png")

DST_IMG_FILES ?= $(patsubst $(SRC_DIR)/%,$(DST_DIR)/%, $(SRC_IMG_FILES))

$(DST_DIR)/%.jpg: $(SRC_DIR)/%.jpg

@mkdir -p $(dir $@)

convert "{body}lt;" -quality 50 -resize 800x800\> "$@"

$(DST_DIR)/%.jpg: $(SRC_DIR)/%.jpeg

@mkdir -p $(dir $@)

convert "{body}lt;" -quality 50 -resize 800x800\> "$@"

$(DST_DIR)/%.gif: $(SRC_DIR)/%.gif

@mkdir -p $(dir $@)

convert "{body}lt;" -quality 50 -resize 800x800\> "$@"

$(DST_DIR)/%.png: $(SRC_DIR)/%.png

@mkdir -p $(dir $@)

convert "{body}lt;" -quality 50 -resize 800x800\> "$@"

.PHONY: img

img: $(DST_IMG_FILES)

ALL += $(DST_IMG_FILES)

## Deploy

A nice bonus is that I also deploy my website using make.

DEPLOY

.PHONY: site

site: $(ALL)

.PHONY: deploy

deploy: $(ALL)

engine/sync.sh

.PHONY: clean

clean:

-[ ! -z "$(DST_DIR)" ] && rm -rf $(DST_DIR)/*

-[ ! -z "$(CACHE_DIR)" ] && rm -rf $(CACHE_DIR)/*


=> /index.gmi Home
=> /gem-atom.xml Feed
=> /slides.gmi Slides
=> /about-me.gmi About

=> https://gitea.esy.fun code
=> https://espial.esy.fun/u:yogsototh bookmarks
=> https://espial.esy.fun/u:yogsototh/notes notes
]]></description>
</item>


<item>
<title>Static Blog Builder</title>
<guid>gemini://her.esy.fun/posts/0017-static-blog-builder/index.gmi</guid>
<pubDate>Sat, 01 May 2021 00:00:00 +0200</pubDate>
<category>blog</category>
<category>static</category>
<description><![CDATA[
# Static Blog Builder
subtitle:  A few static blog rewrite experiences
author:  Yann Esposito
email:  yann@esposito.host
=> /files/publickey.txt gpg
date:  [2021-05-01 Sat]
keywords:  blog static
description:  Minimal and fast static website builder with make.



As someone on the Internet said not so far ago.
Building its own static building system is a rite of passage for many developers.
It has a lot of nice features.
It gives a goal with a feeling of accomplishment.
It is simple enough so most developers could build their own system.
It could also become complex when you go down the rabbit hole.

Along the years I used different tools and used and wrote of few static
website systems:


=> https://nanoc.app nanoc
 (in Ruby), at that time it looked like this:

=> https://web.archive.org/web/20081002071448/http://nanoc.stoneship.org/ old nanoc 2 website


=> https://jaspervdj.be/hakyll/ hakyll
 (haskell static website generator)

=> https://orgmode.org/worg/org-tutorials/org-publish-html-tutorial.html org-publish
 (emacs package in conjunction with org-mode)

=> https://shakebuild.com shake
 (haskell again)

So if you look at the progression, I first used nanoc because I used ruby
and it was a new solution, the website looked really great.
Also the main developer

=> https://denisdefreyne.com Denis Defreyne
 was really helpful.
Ruby was really great at dealing with regular expressions for hacking my
documents.

Then I was interested in Haskell, and I switched to a Haskell-made
solution.
I used hakyll, and I wrote a bit about it in

=> http://yannesposito.com/Scratch/en/blog/Hakyll-setup/ Hakyll Setup
As a side note, the author of Hakyll

=> https://jaspervdj.be/hakyll/ Jasper Van der Jeugt
 is apparently a
friend of the author of nanoc.
They both wrote a static site generators with their preferred programming
language.
I added a lot of personal features to my own site builder.
It was a nice toy project.

Then, due to a major disruption in my professional and private life I
stopped to take care of my website.

And a few years ago, I wanted to start a new website from scratch.
In the meantime I switched my editor of choice from vim to Emacs.
I started to work in Clojure and emacs is generally a natural choice
because you can configure it with LISP.
I discovered

=> https://orgmode.org/worg/org-tutorials/org-publish-html-tutorial.html org-mode
 (I don't think the homepage of org mode makes justice
to how incredible it is).
So org-mode comes with an export system.
Thus I switched to org-publish.
Again

=> https://her.esy.fun/posts/0001-new-blog/index.html I wrote a bit about it

It was nice but slow.
I improved a few things like writing a short script to


=> https://her.esy.fun/posts/0005-rss-gen/index.html Generate RSS from a tree of html files.

I still had the feeling it was too slow.

Static site building is a specific usage of a build system.
And as I knew I could use =pandoc= to build HTML out of org-mode files
and still versed in the Haskell culture I decided to try

=> https://shakebuild.com shake
You can learn more by reading this excellent paper about it, I
think all developer should read it:

=> https://github.com/snowleopard/build-systems/releases/download/icfp-submission/build-systems.pdf Build System à la carte

As a bonus,

=> https://pandoc.org pandoc
 is written in Haskell.
I could then directly use the

=> https://pandoc.org pandoc
 library in my build program.
It worked like a charm and it was *very fast* as compared to other
solutions I tried.
So really let me tell you shake is a great build system.

Unfortunately it was not perfect.
While it was very fast, and I was able to use pandoc API directly.
It made me dependent on Haskell.
The best way I found to have Haskell reproducible build environment is to
use

=> https://nixos.org/nix nix
This was great until the Big Sur update.
To keep it short, nix stopped working on my computers after I upgraded my
to Big Sur.
Gosh, it was painful to fix.

Concurrently I discovered

=> /posts/0016-gemini/index.html gemini
 and wanted to duplicate my website into
gemini sphere.
So I tried to update my build system but my code was to oriented to use
pandoc and it was painful to have gemini in the middle of it.
Particularly, generating a gemini index file.
My main goal was to have gemini file that could only be linked from withing
gemini sphere.
Because gemini is a lot smaller web where you could feel a bit more
protected from what the Web has become along the years.
Whatever, in the end, I just had two problems to tackles.

1. Haskell became difficult to trust as very stable tool. Stable in the
   sense that I would not have any support work to do in order to keep just
   using it and not fixing/tweaking it.
2. Simplify the overall system to have a simpler build description

So a very stable tool that I am pretty sure will still work almost exactly
as today in 10 years is *=make=* (more precisely gnumake).
I expected a lot of people had already come to the same conclusion and
wrote about it.
To my great surprise, I found very few article about generating static
website with make.
I only found solutions a bit too specific for my need.
This is why I would like to give you a more generic starting point
solution.

# The =Makefile=

Instead of copy/pasting my current =Makefile= entirely let me give you a
more generic one.
It should be a great start.

The first part will be used to simply copy the files from =src/= to
=_site/=.

all: website

directory containing my org files as well as my assets files

SRC_DIR ?= src

directory where I will but the files for my website (HTML + assets)

DST_DIR ?= _site

list all files in src

if you want to exclude .org files use the exclude from the find command

SRC_RAW_FILES := $(shell find $(SRC_DIR) -type f)

generate all file that should be copied in the site

For my site, I want to publish my source files along the HTML files

DST_RAW_FILES := $(patsubst $(SRC_DIR)/%,$(DST_DIR)/%,$(SRC_RAW_FILES))

ALL += $(DST_RAW_FILES)

COPY EVERYTHING (.org file included)

$(DST_DIR)/% : $(SRC_DIR)/%

mkdir -p "$(dir $@)"

cp "{body}lt;" "$@"


This part is about running the =pandoc= command for all =org= files in =src/=
so they generate a html file in =_site/=.

ORG -> HTML, If you prefer markdown replace .org by .md

EXT := .org

all source file we'll pass to pandoc

SRC_PANDOC_FILES ?= $(shell find $(SRC_DIR) -type f -name "*$(EXT)")

all destination files we expect (replace the extension by .html)

DST_PANDOC_FILES ?= $(subst $(EXT),.html, \

$(subst $(SRC_DIR),$(DST_DIR), \

$(SRC_PANDOC_FILES)))

ALL += $(DST_PANDOC_FILES)

use a template (you should use one)

TEMPLATE ?= templates/post.html

URL of the CSS put yours

CSS = /css/y.css

The pandoc command to run to generate an html out of a source file

PANDOC := pandoc \

-c $(CSS) \

--template=$(TEMPLATE) \

--from org \

--to html5 \

--standalone

Generate all html if the org file change or the template change

$(DST_DIR)/%.html: $(SRC_DIR)/%.org $(TEMPLATE)

mkdir -p $(dir $@)

$(PANDOC) {body}lt; \

--output $@


A missing part is often the part where you would like to generate
an index page to list the latest posts.
Here you are a bit alone, you need to make one yourself.
There is not generic way to do this one.

Generating an index page is not difficult but not trivial either

HTML_INDEX := $(DST_DIR)/index.html

MKINDEX := engine/mk-index.sh

$(HTML_INDEX): $(DST_PANDOC_FILES) $(MKINDEX)

mkdir -p $(DST_DIR)

$(MKINDEX)

ALL += $(HTML_INDEX)


Finally, a few useful make commands. =make clean= and =make deploy=.

make deploy will deploy the files to my website write your own script

deploy: $(ALL)

engine/deploy.sh

website: $(ALL)

.PHONY: clean

clean:

-rm -rf $(DST_DIR)/*


Limitation: =make= is old.
So it really does not support spaces in filenames.
Take care of that.

Let me tell you.
While this is quite a minimalist approach (<100 lines) it is nevertheless *very fast*.
It will only generate the minimal amount of work to generate your website.
I have a nice watcher script that update the website every time I save a
file.
It is almost instantaneous.

The only risky dependencies for my website now is =pandoc=.
Perhaps, they will change how they generate an HTML from the same org file
in the future.
I still use =nix= to pin my pandoc version.
The static site builder itself is very simple, very stable and still
very efficient.

As a conclusion, if you want to write your own static site builder that's great.
There are plenty of things to learn along the way.
Still if you want something stable for a long time, with a minimal amount
of dependencies, I think this Makefile is really a great start.

=> /index.gmi Home
=> /gem-atom.xml Feed
=> /slides.gmi Slides
=> /about-me.gmi About

=> https://gitea.esy.fun code
=> https://espial.esy.fun/u:yogsototh bookmarks
=> https://espial.esy.fun/u:yogsototh/notes notes
]]></description>
</item>


<item>
<title>Gemini</title>
<guid>gemini://her.esy.fun/posts/0016-gemini/index.gmi</guid>
<pubDate>Mon, 09 Nov 2020 00:00:00 +0100</pubDate>
<category>internet</category>
<category>gopher</category>
<category>gemini</category>
<description><![CDATA[
# Gemini
author:  Yann Esposito
email:  yann@esposito.host
=> /files/publickey.txt gpg
date:  [2020-11-09 Mon]
keywords:  internet gopher gemini
description:  How I discovered gemini

This weekend I read an article about gopher and gemini.
I already seen articles about gemini pass.
Somehow, it was more appealing to me than gopher space for totally
subjective reasons I think.
Anyway this time I really dug into it, and I loved the experience.

At first sight gemini is like a parallel web for nerds.
It has fundamental changes that I would have really liked to see from the
modern web.
The client decide the design, no user tracking, calm, minimalist, simple.

Right now, on the web, most news website make the experience terrible to
read the article.
The page is bloated with a lot of animations, popin asking you to accept
the cookies, ads with videos, strange fonts or design, plenty of
javascript, trackers, etc...

Gemini make those kind of anti-design impractical.
In gemini space there is no:


  width of the columns, etc...

  displayed in the middle of the text.

  as an element on its own line.


Another strength of Gemini is its protocol's simplicity.
It is easy to write your own gemini server as well as your own gemini
client within a few hours of work in your programming language of choice.

And last but not least, gemini is unfit to serve "big" files.
So we should not experience people going to gemini for music/movie piracy.
If you want to serve "big" files you should use another protocol.

Personally I started to browse gemini directly from emacs with elpher.
But I know there are a lot of clients.

I liked gemini so much I hacked my blog to also publish in the gemini sphere.
I serve my pages with a rust based server.
And I hacked a quick script to transform my org mode files to gemini format.
Gemini file format is a kind of super simplified markdown.
I really like the simplicity of it.

Here are a few links to get you started.

Web:


=> https://gemini.circumlunar.space gemini homepage


=> https://thelambdalab.xyz/elpher/ elpher emacs gopher and gemini client


=> https://portal.mozz.us/gemini/gemini.circumlunar.space/ Explore gemini from the web


Gopher:


=> gopher://thelambdalab.xyz/1/projects/elpher/ elpher


Gemini:


=> gemini://her.esy.fun my website in gemini


=> /index.gmi Home
=> /gem-atom.xml Feed
=> /slides.gmi Slides
=> /about-me.gmi About

=> https://gitea.esy.fun code
=> https://espial.esy.fun/u:yogsototh bookmarks
=> https://espial.esy.fun/u:yogsototh/notes notes
]]></description>
</item>

</channel>
</rss>