This page is not created by, affiliated with, or supported by Slack Technologies, Inc.
2019-05-28
Channels
- # announcements (11)
- # aws (30)
- # beginners (98)
- # calva (11)
- # cider (42)
- # clj-kondo (4)
- # cljdoc (1)
- # cljsrn (5)
- # clojure (132)
- # clojure-europe (4)
- # clojure-ireland (1)
- # clojure-italy (35)
- # clojure-japan (2)
- # clojure-nl (5)
- # clojure-spec (5)
- # clojure-uk (24)
- # clojurescript (71)
- # clojutre (1)
- # core-async (6)
- # cursive (9)
- # data-science (4)
- # datascript (3)
- # datomic (78)
- # duct (16)
- # emacs (14)
- # events (2)
- # fulcro (141)
- # graalvm (5)
- # hoplon (14)
- # hyperfiddle (2)
- # jobs-discuss (14)
- # joker (8)
- # luminus (2)
- # off-topic (7)
- # om (1)
- # pathom (4)
- # pedestal (7)
- # planck (2)
- # quil (1)
- # re-frame (14)
- # reagent (2)
- # reitit (14)
- # robots (1)
- # shadow-cljs (20)
- # spacemacs (25)
- # specter (1)
- # sql (122)
- # tools-deps (63)
- # unrepl (2)
- # yada (34)
Thanks! I thought I remembered that but couldn’t find the cljr feature, so I think spacemacs updates might have broke this
@benedek I think clj-refactor.el was disabled by default, as it was often out of sync with CIDER and the upgrades were causing a lot of breakages.
Generally a simpler setup is better for beginners and advanced users generally can enable everything they want/need.
Yeah, I remembered this correctly https://github.com/syl20bnr/spacemacs/tree/develop/layers/+lang/clojure#enabling-sayid-or-clj-refactor
Maybe we should mention it in the project READMEs (sayid and clj-refactor) at some point.
Is it just me or is https://cider.mx/ down?
no bother I can use https://github.com/clojure-emacs/cider/tree/master/doc/modules/ROOT/pages — just weird
you want: https://docs.cider.mx I think (that's what's linked from the top-level README in the cider repo)
although I note cider-view-manual
does not resolve correctly (goes to "https://docs.cider.mx/en/latest/" which 404s)
thanks
for some reason my brower history has
…
@rickmoynihan I’ve reworked the manual a couple of days ago. The new one is https://docs.cider.mx/. I’ll still wondering what to put at the apex domain (http://cider.mx). I’d love to create one nice overview page for the project in the style of http://antora.org, but my design skills are too limited. 😄
@bozhidar: that’s really neat :thumbsup:
I’d noticed your new drop down, very cool
FYI the legacy docs are still available at https://cider.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ (with a deprecation notice)
@rickmoynihan The new manual is powered by Antora and AsciiDoc, which are infinitely better than Markdown, MkDocs and ReadTheDocs. There are some open items (e.g. auto-deployment, search), but I’m pretty happy with the results so far.
is antora an oss project itself, or a service?
ahh cool it’s a cli tool
it’s just a shame asciidoc isn’t org-mode 🙂 - ho ho ho
grrr 😉
I guess it makes less sense in the context of cider, but JUXT standardized asciidoc because I couldn't edit the org files
yes other people are org-modes only problem 🙂
Org mode has breaking changes and is hard to parse. Very hard for complete tools to emerge. The vim org stuff is only partially complete.
yeah I know… it’s incredibly tightly coupled to Emacs. It’s just a shame that it’s simultaneously often the best tool for the job; but also the worst for almost everyone else.
I’ve liked the look of asciidoc for a long time though, as a half decent alternative
@dominicm True that. I’m not sure how I feel about Antora per se, but I definitely love AsciiDoc.
But I do plan to put one documentation module in cider-nrepl
and pull it in the main cider docs site. Maybe more down the road.