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I gave Astrobotany a try this last week. It is kind of fun, but I quickly realized I didn't want to manually water my plant each day. Emacs to the rescue! First I needed a function to water the plant:
(defun water-plant () (interactive) (message "watering plant") (start-process "gmni" nil "gmni" "-I" "-E" (concat plant-cert ":" plant-key) "gemini://astrobotany.mozz.us/app/plant/water"))
This requires gmni to be installed. It uses the appropriate cert and key from the corresponding identity generated by lagrange.
(defvar plant-cert "/home/christopher/.config/lagrange/idents/<snip>.crt") (defvar plant-key "/home/christopher/.config/lagrange/idents/<snip>.key")
Emacs has a timer library, so I just need some code in the init.el to start a timer:
(run-at-time "04:00" 86400 'water-plant)
That will run at 4am every morning so long as Emacs is running, which for me is pretty much 24x7. There is an oddity in the design of run-at-time, such that if the time of day is already past 4am when run-at-time is called (i.e., when the init.el file is loaded) then water-plant will immediately be run once. So the plant gets an extra watering every time I restart Emacs. But fortunately in Astrobotany watering attempts are automatically cancelled if the plant is already 100% hydrated.
Here are the public links to my plant:
I also wrote a little function to view the plant inside Emacs, so that I wouldn't have to bother switching over to Lagrange:
(defun view-plant () (interactive) (get-buffer-create "*plant*") (with-current-buffer "*plant*" (erase-buffer)) (call-process "gmni" nil "*plant*" nil "-E" (concat plant-cert ":" plant-key) "gemini://astrobotany.mozz.us/app/plant") (switch-to-buffer "*plant*") (goto-line 29 "*plant*") (view-mode t))
The lines at the end basically scroll down a bit to get the plant in view, and then it switches the buffer over to view-mode so I can just press "q" to close the buffer.
This work © 2024 by Christopher Howard is licensed under Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International.