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2:50:51
fiddlerwoaroof
jasom: I've been using vim for a while now (10 years +/-) anyways, I recently switched to a custom emacs config based on evil-mode and it's surprisingly good
2:51:20
fiddlerwoaroof
Also, I've been playing around with using utilities to bind the shift keys to ( and )
2:51:58
fiddlerwoaroof
Basically, when you hit and release shift quickly without another key, it inserts a parenthesis but if the shift is part of a chord, no parenthesis is inserted
2:52:25
fiddlerwoaroof
The jury is still out on this setup, but it makes life a tiny bit easier... and it's more intuitive to use the left side of the keyboard for ( and the right side for )
4:45:31
axion
if ningle is too much, it is built on clack. if ningle is not enough, caveman2 is built on it (all by same author)
4:59:26
sukaeto
by default it pulls in a lot of dependencies, but they're all pretty useful (sxql, datafly, djula)
5:01:07
sukaeto
further ningle/caveman2/anything based on clack are pretty easy to manage in production
5:02:31
sukaeto
I use docker to spin up a bunch of fcgi workers and set up nginx to round robin to them
6:34:57
drmeister
Hey lispers - I set up a demo of Cando running in a jupyter notebook over the web.
6:35:15
drmeister
I wonder if a kind soul could connect into it with their browser and tell me if it works for them.
6:35:37
drmeister
It's a Common Lisp implementation with Chemistry code that builds molecules and displays them in your browser.
6:39:46
drmeister
It should open up a notebook and if you click an "In" box and then hit Shift-Enter - it will build some molecules and let you view them.
6:41:37
drmeister
I'm just looking for confirmation that it works from somewhere other than my laptop
6:45:33
drmeister
I don't want to leave this thing running - it's running in a Docker container on an AWS instance - but it can evaluate arbitrary code and it costs me a few pennies an hour to run the thing.