From 6ebf0ccbfab1b51b51d3417a482222386a5ceca6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Sacha Chua Date: Fri, 8 Dec 2023 10:21:03 -0500 Subject: add all the comments from IRC and the pad --- 2023/talks/repl.md | 26 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 26 insertions(+) (limited to '2023/talks/repl.md') diff --git a/2023/talks/repl.md b/2023/talks/repl.md index 8b59c01a..3c867b0a 100644 --- a/2023/talks/repl.md +++ b/2023/talks/repl.md @@ -82,6 +82,32 @@ About the speaker: I am this person here: http://anggtwu.net/eepitch.html +# Discussion + +## Questions and answers + +- Q:if you had to summarize what you where trying to say in 3 + sentences or less, what would you say? + - A: Ouch! I would answer with a link\... this one: + + +## Notes + +- Magic is good as long as you have the option to look behind the + scenes when you want! :-)  Imagine if all code was assembly + language. +- hi edrx! =) great talk + +- A :I didn't create a git repo with the code yet because I don't have any idea if anyone would want to test it today... everything is made to be used with this interface, + +- Q: is the code available as a tarball perhaps? or not at all yet? + - as I know very few people who use eev - and who already use that interface - I wanted to ask them if they'd be ok with installing some files in ~/LUA/ and ~/LATEX/, or if they really needed to use other directories, or what... the things that are to be installed in ~/LUA/ are in a tarball, but a few of the files require some files in ~/LATEX/. I'm preparing the LATEX/ directory of the tarball now and I'll announce it on the eev mailing list soon +- Dealing with diagrams with Emacs is tricky. Having documented examples of that is nice and would be helpful + - A: I _guess_ that the ideas that I presented would be easy to adapt to SVG diagrams, and to some packages that use Javascript to generate their diagram... but I don't want to write the code for SVG and for js diagrams all by myself. what do you use - or what have tried to use - to generate diagrams? + - i've personally tried using a bunch of different tools but never found anything that fully clicked for me or was remotely pleasant to use. i guess 'draw.io' is decent, but something in Emacs would be awesome + - do you think that musa's way to making emacs run javascript could work for draw.io? + - hmm no clue tbh, worth trying to ask him. but i must say i'm not super enthused about embedding js in emacs + - having tried most things (from exwm to org-protocol, to devtools debug protocol, and what not), I've converged on small personal extension that loads across browsers, locally, and stay connected with Emacs via the very useful emacs-websocket package, to interact both with the internal state of the browser (windows, tabs, etc.) and intra-page [[!inline pages="internal(2023/info/repl-after)" raw="yes"]] -- cgit v1.2.3