Today, I looked at my #iocaine dashboard, and decided to postpone further dumpster diving 'till after the 2.5.0 release.
Today, I'll try to finish all the documentation I've been putting off for far too long.
Today, I looked at my #iocaine dashboard, and decided to postpone further dumpster diving 'till after the 2.5.0 release.
Today, I'll try to finish all the documentation I've been putting off for far too long.
On the documentation front, I just deployed the first set of documentation about request handlers.
It's a generic overview of the feature, what it can do, and how, and list of core functionality each engine provides. There's nothing language-specific there, and no code examples (it's a language-agnostic overview, afterall), but I think it turned out fine nevertheless.
I will likely end up tweaking it further, but this is a good first approximation of what I had in mind. Language-specific reference guides to follow soon.
What if iocaine 3.0 allowed mixing request handler languages? If you could call Lua/Fennel from Roto, and vice versa.
Meanwhile: a Roto in iocaine reference guide.
I don't think I will finish Lua today, I have a couple of deployment guides to finish too. But tomorrow? Very likely.
And then I can cut a 2.5.0 release on Sunday, as planned.
To be honest... I might do that now, to take a break from typing, and spend time looking at stuff instead.
Oooor... maybe I'll take things slow, and have a little break. I've been standing in front of the computer for the past ~5 hours and I should move my legs a little or something.
Looked at Zola themes. Therein lies pain and misery. Lets write more documentation instead.
One I'm done with the deployment guides, before I move on to finishing the Lua reference guide, I'll go and change the theme of the iocaine website.
The current one doesn't work well. Some of the things come out really, really awkwardly.
On an unrelated note, the #iocaine 3.0 plans are massive. 2.2 with the scripting engine was huge. 3.0 is bigger, better.
A space for Bonfire maintainers and contributors to communicate