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2020-01-04
Channels
- # announcements (13)
- # babashka (19)
- # beginners (74)
- # boot (1)
- # calva (5)
- # clj-kondo (22)
- # clojure (46)
- # clojure-android (3)
- # clojure-dev (4)
- # clojure-uk (69)
- # clojurescript (19)
- # community-development (17)
- # cursive (27)
- # datomic (9)
- # emacs (13)
- # graalvm (2)
- # instaparse (4)
- # luminus (1)
- # off-topic (21)
- # reagent (6)
- # remote-jobs (1)
- # ring-swagger (4)
- # test-check (49)
- # vrac (1)
(map (fn [pancake] (-> pancake
(ingred/sprinkle :sugar)
(ingred/squeeze :lemon)
eat)
pancakes)
Nice, but I think you need a transducer there, since they weren't the flat type of pancakes, but rather the fluffy, puffy ones with no lemon š
Yup eat them over here too but me being the old fart I am, still getting drenched in lemon and sugar š
I must be the strange one, since my wife likes them drenched in maple syrup and butter. I like them plain, unadulterated, boooring š
That's the American, House of Pancakes, style. I like 'em that way too, but needs some bacon along side to cut the sweetness.
these are not exclusive possibilities... maple syrup and lemon juice is great too - perhaps even better than sugar and lemon juice
and then there are the banana + chocolate dimensions to consider
@mccraigmccraig You know my thoughts on chocolateā¦.. :face_vomiting: š
i forgot peanut butter!
I make pancakes with banana and egg. Then I don't feel as guilty about what's on top...
I think @seancorfield is a Windows user
It's complicated. I do some Clojure dev on a Windows laptop. I do most of my Clojure dev on macOS, but I only use Terminal for that, and run Windows 10 in a VM and do almost everything in there, that isn't hardcore dev.
I'm curious to know if people here use a personal task-tracking application for work related stuff, e.g., trello? asana? etc?
Very. Topydo cli to manage it, and todotxt.vim. On Android I use simpletask to work with it. I sync it all together with syncthing, but dropbox works too.
I use Microsoft's ToDo app (and web site) for lists of task, and shopping, etc. But not real "task management". For FOSS I use GitHub issues (or JIRA for Contrib) and for work I use JIRA.
I like MS ToDO since it runs on iOS, Android, Windows, and macOS, and has a website version, and they all stay in sync -- and my wife and I can share lists as well as having our own.
We're both kind of obsessively list-based. Shopping. "Honey do's". Road trip packing lists.
Late to the party on this one, but I find it an interesting topic. Nothing has especially stuck for me. Iāve tried org-mode, itās nice, but Iām a Vim user at heart and it needs more time investing in it than I care to. I also really like being able to manage todos on my phone and in a web browser. TaskWarrior ticks a lot of nerdy boxes for me on the command line, but for some reason I tend not to use it. Iām mainly using Trello for personal stuff mixed with a todo.md for some work stuff. Microsoft Todo is decent. But I love the interface of Trello, that I can add links, markdown notes, organise exactly how I like and the reorganise in a new way when I decide my old way sucks. Trello is so flexible. Obviously I manage a lot of work tasks via a ticketing system. With both my Trello and todo.md my core concept is that I have an Inbox/Focus area that is a list of things I must keep looking at in a day. Every new task goes in there until I either do something with it or demote it to another list/area. The idea is that at the end of the day the inbox is 0. That never happens, but thatās the ideal.
Sounds like the GTD principles around managing email (and other things).
I'm a big fan of that and people are often shocked at just how empty my inbox is, given that I receive maybe 100 emails a day.
I used to have my todos go into an inbox, but I have so few and I've gotten better at articulating tasks. I evaluated org as a vim user, and todo.txt was what I ended up with. But I particularly wanted android support.
I really wanted to rely on plain text so that I could Vim it and Git it, but Iām just too drawn by the flexibility of Trello and the fact that itās everywhere.
Just to be clear... by inbox I donāt mean email. I just literally mean a section that is both a dumping ground and high priority list. That way when I get time my ādumping groundā stuff gets clarified and optionally demoted to another list. For other items I either need to get them done or continually review whether they should be in my focus/inbox list. Then periodically review my lower priority lists.
Not sure why but i just found it easier and i think the physical book helped me focus more haha
I've never stuck to a to-do system, despite many tries. The only thing I've stuck with is to use org-mode during code reviews. We do them in person, so I need to write down the critiques as they arise. I put my cursor on the line being discussed, and type something like (it's unconscious, but I think it is) C-c c t. Afterwards, I have the notes with links to specific lines in my org To-Dos.
I then mark them as done as I address each critique.
Iāve tried so many things, but nothing has stuck. Iām an agent of chaos like the joker. Iāve played with org-mode but I have the same problems I have with this geeky emacsy stuff I always have. One moment I like the org mode simplicity, the next I want my watch to remind me to do things ;). Iāll probably give something like āthingsā another shot this year.
@wesley.hall orgzly and other org for mobile apps exist, they can do notifications.
It's complicated. I do some Clojure dev on a Windows laptop. I do most of my Clojure dev on macOS, but I only use Terminal for that, and run Windows 10 in a VM and do almost everything in there, that isn't hardcore dev.
(and, yes, I use a mixture of WSL, Powershell, and cmd.exe
now that Borkdude's native deps.clj
works there)
heres a tip i learnt which you might already know. ctrl+\
takes u to repl then esc esc
takes you back to file editor.