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2018-12-18
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Could anyone tell me why this local nested atom is not updating the (cond)?
(defn nested-component
[]
(fn []
(let [parent-state (r/atom :parent)]
[:div @parent-state
(let [child-state (r/atom :child)]
(cond
(= @child-state :child)
[:div {:on-click #(reset! child-state :updated)}
"default behavior"]
(= @child-state :updated)
[:div "updated"]))]))
I made it generic to shorten it up. I've been staring at this for hours and can't figure out why the second condition is not rendering once the default div is clicked. I have confirmed the atom is actually being updated but the [:div "updated"]
is not rendering.
EDIT: I think when child-state
is updated the entire parent component re-renders and child-state
is set back to :child
Hi 👋 ,
It looks like the clojure community is into building code as small, easily composable pieces of architecture.
This requires me to think harder and more critically about the architecture of my apps, which is great, I want to build that muscle!
Where I could really use some help is learning a solid process for debugging the errors that show up when I try and compose things together.
e.g. A small one: I just ran boot repl
in a new luminus +boot project with clojure 1.10, java8, boot 2.8.2 and got this error:
java.lang.Exception: No namespace: reply.eval-modes.nrepl found
How would people approach debugging this step-by-step? I want to learn how to solve these kinds of problems myself so I can handle myself better in the clojure ecosystem.Alex's advice is good for debugging things once you have a REPL up and running. Unfortunately you are running into a problem caused by conflicting versions of tooling. You'll probably need to use a different version of Boot to resolve that. I'm not at my computer right now but, if no one has helped you solve this by then, I'll try tomorrow.
If you downgrade to Boot 2.7.2, that warning will go away:
(! 538)-> BOOT_VERSION=2.8.2 boot repl
nREPL server started on port 61847 on host 127.0.0.1 -
java.lang.Exception: No namespace: reply.eval-modes.nrepl found
REPL-y 0.4.1, nREPL 0.5.3
Clojure 1.10.0-beta8
OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM 1.8.0_192-b12
...
Tue Dec 18 09:17:18
(sean)-(jobs:0)-(~/clojure/adc)
(! 539)-> ^2.8.2^2.7.2
BOOT_VERSION=2.7.2 boot repl
nREPL server started on port 61872 on host 127.0.0.1 -
REPL-y 0.3.7, nREPL 0.2.12
Clojure 1.10.0-beta8
OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM 1.8.0_192-b12
This is due to a transition in tooling, where nREPL moved from a Contrib library to a community library and a bunch of namespaces changing as part of that, as well as a number of tooling version upgrades that have been happening. At some point there should be a new version of Boot that is fully compatible with the new nREPL tooling.thanks @seancorfield,how would I have figured that out myself? as a beginner to clojure, the tooling is often an obstacle. java + leiningen + boot + managing parens (+ a bunch of other complicated stuff when working with clojurescript) is pretty challenging. any advice on staying on top of this kind of issue?
This sort of thing is hard and, luckily, fairly rare. I actually think it's easier to start with the clj
CLI and deps.edn
file approach -- it's directly supported by the Clojure/core team and it's well-documented on http://clojure.org
That said, you'll run across Leiningen pretty much everywhere because it's the oldest tool and it's in all the books (and most of the tutorials).
Boot hasn't been a model of stability lately, unfortunately, but it was pretty awesome from around 2.5 up to the 2.7 release. Only 2.8 has been flaky.
At work, we started with Leiningen way back in 2011, migrated to Boot at the end of 2015 to get more flexibility, and recently migrated to the newer, simpler tooling provided by Clojure itself. We're glad to be away from the big, complex build tools but right now there's no version of clj
for Windows (so I use Windows Subsystem for Linux for my Clojure work on Win10).
Stu Halloway has a great debugging talk on YouTube
i'm looking for a function to merge a vector of kvs into a map .. (?? {:a -1} [:a 1 :b 2 :c 3]) => {:a 1 :b 2 :c 3}
what this one do:
(defn index-of [in value]
(loop [in in
i 0]
(if (= (first in) value)
i
(recur (rest in)
(inc i)))))
it recurs on the collection in
and returns the index position of value
in the collection (if found)
Does anybody have a good idea on how to ensure a child thread invoked in Clojure dies when it's parent dies? My current solution is like:
(let [main-thread (Thread/currentThread)]
(future
(loop []
(when (.isAlive main-thread)
(recur)))))
which works for a some non-zero amount of time, but the child thread seems to die randomly before the calling thread is closed. Not too sure why this is happening 😕luminus server start has a bit like this (.addShutdownHook (Runtime/getRuntime) (Thread. ^Runnable stop-server))
(stop-server being an fn)
maybe that's what you're looking for?
yeah, I think I could potentially use this to set the status of the main thread to closed. It might be more reliable - will try it out! Thanks
in the JVM, if you mark a Thread as a daemon thread, it will not prevent the JVM from shutting down if it has not finished
future uses thread pools where the threads are NOT daemon threads, but you can make your own thread instead:
(doto (Thread. ^Runnable #(println "whatever")) (.setDaemon true) (.start))
In my case I want the child thread to continue running dependent on other cases. If either the parent thread is running or an atom containing a list that it is referencing is not empty, then the child should carry on. I was using claypoole to get the daemon thread, but ran into the issue of potentially losing the items on the queue when the calling thread is closed I'll make a better example, give me a second
I'm doing something like this:
(let [queue (atom (clojure.lang.PersistentQueue/EMPTY))]
(future
(loop []
(Thread/sleep 2000)
;; processes events on queues here, before going to next s-expr
(when (or (parent-thread-lives)
(not (.isEmpty @queue)))
(recur))))
queue)
parent-thread-lives
is the part I'm not sure how to get rightwell, the isAlive check mentioned above is probably the shortest step (just pass in a handle to the producer thread)
you may also want to just use agents, which have about a 90% match to this too
for some reason, the child thread dies before the main thread when I use .isAlive
. If I remove the check, then the child thread will run forever - so I'm fairly confident it's not a different issue with the operations occurring in the child thread.
Oh well, I'll keep trying to debug since it sounds like I'm on the right track of how to do this! Thanks!
I forget the details but nrepl with evalute code in a different thread for every eval message sent to it
so (Thread/currentThread)
will return some random threadpool thread that may just go away
I am not using nrepl in this case, but it does seem to me like isAlive
isn't working as I expect. I'm still getting the occassional false
from isAlive
, which kills the child process when it isn't supposed to.
Hello all. I am using the following macro from clojuredocs (with-out-str entry) for passing the printed time result and its body from a time function (ex. (time (+ 1 2)) into other functions. )
Now everything is working, but I am confused about the (binding [out s#] portion of the code
My initial thinking was that it would be (binding [s# out], since s# is the value given to the :str key.
How is the value of "Elapsed time 123.21313ms" being bound to s#?
if you check out the source of pr
you will see it uses the dynamic var *out*
. This is why dynamic vars are useful. You substitute that var with a string writer, let it accumulate the writes and then return it at the end
out is normally system.out or whatever in java. and you want to redirect things from that to your s#
var which is a java io StringWriter
ahh, that makes sense! Thank you @dpsutton
Is there a common idiom for mixing regular function application with apply
? What I usually find myself doing is something like (apply dissoc (concat [m] ks))
which seems a bit weird and contrived
(apply dissoc m ks)
should work
gotta remember to look at the docs because there's always that extra little touch to the standard library that other languages lack
With apply
, only the last argument needs to be a collection. All the others can be provided directly: (apply f arg1 arg2 arg3 args)
This is what's in my blood: https://ramdajs.com/docs/#apply
@U1KLLEBSA Me too! Underscore->Ramda->Clojure(Script).
I thought Ramda was elegant. Many functions in clojure.core
have multiple arities that really make sense.
Thanks @seancorfield!