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538 lines
18 KiB
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538 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
---
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title: Dojo manual
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sort: 8
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---
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# `:dojo` manual
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The dojo is a typed functional shell. Assuming our default
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plot `~fintud-macrep`,
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Its prompt is:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo>
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## Quickstart
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To print a Hoon expression or other recipe:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> (add 2 2)
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To save a recipe as a variable `foo`:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> =foo (add 2 2)
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To save as a unix file (`$pier/.urb/put/foo/bar.baz`):
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> .foo/bar/baz (add 2 2)
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To save as an urbit file (`/===/foo/bar/baz`):
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> *foo/bar/baz (add 2 2)
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A noun generator with ordered and named arguments:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> +make one two three, =foo (add 2 2), =bar 42
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A poke message to an urbit daemon:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> :~fintud-macrep/talk (add 2 2)
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A system command to `:hood`:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> |reload %vane
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## Manual
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An Urbit value is called a "noun." A noun is either an unsigned
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integer ("atom") or an ordered pair of nouns ("cell"). Nouns
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are just values, with no cyclic structure or pointer identity.
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The dojo is your safe space for hand-to-hand combat with nouns.
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Every dojo command builds a "product" noun functionally, then
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applies this product in a side effect -- show, save, or send.
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### Theory
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In the quickstart we learned a crude interpretation of the dojo
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in terms of "expressions, generators and operations." While
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nothing in the quickstart section is inaccurate, it's not the way
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the system works internally.
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*All* dojo lines are commands. An operation uses a *recipe*
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to create a noun, which the command uses in its side effect.
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Just printing the noun is a trivial case of a command.
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Recipes are *conceptually* functional, but often use concrete,
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stateful action sequences. A simple Hoon expression (*twig*) is
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purely functional, but it's only one kind of recipe.
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A recipe can get data from an HTTP GET request or an interactive
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input dialog. It can also query, even block on, the Urbit
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namespace. These operations are *conceptually* functional, but
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not *actually* functional. They don't belong in a pure Hoon
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expression, but they do belong in a dojo recipe. A recipe is "FP
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in the large," more like Unix pipes than Haskell monads.
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The dojo is "single-threaded" in each session. One session can
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work on one command at a time. The session does not accept user
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input while processing a command, even when it blocks over the
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network. And each session's state is independent. (If you want
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to work on two things at a time, connect two console sessions to
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your dojo.)
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Once you've built the product of your recipe, you show, save,
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or send it.
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You can pretty-print the product to the console. You can save it
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-- as a dojo variable, as a revision to the Urbit filesystem, or
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as an export to a file in the Unix filesystem. Or you can
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send it -- staying native with an Urbit poke, or going retro
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with an HTTP PUT/POST.
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All these operations are typed. Hoon is a statically typed
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language, but the dojo is a dynamic interpreter. The nouns you
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build in the dojo are dynamically typed nouns, or "cages".
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A cage actually has two layers of type: "mark," a network label
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(like a MIME type), and "span," a Hoon language type. When a
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cage is sent across the Urbit network, the receiving daemon
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validates the noun against its own version of the mark, and
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regenerates the span.
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Of course, sometimes a recipe produces a noun with mark `%noun`,
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meaning "any noun," and span `*`, the set of all nouns. We have
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no choice but to do the best we can with mystery nouns, but we
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prefer a formal description.
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A mark is also called a "format." Marks let us perform a variety
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of formal typed operations on nouns: validation, translation,
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even patch and diff for revision control.
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### Other resources
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An excellent way to understand `:dojo` is to read the source,
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which is in `/===/ape/dojo/hoon`.
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Unfortunately, you may or may not know Hoon. We'll use some Hoon
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snippets here for defining structures and grammars. Just think
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of it as pseudocode -- the meaning should be clear from context.
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### Syntax and semantics
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To use the dojo, type a complete command at the dojo prompt.
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The simplest command just prints a Hoon expression:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> (add 2 2)
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Hit return. You'll see:
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> (add 2 2)
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4
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~fintud-macrep:dojo>
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Similarly in tall form,
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> %+ add 2 2
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> %+ add 2 2
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4
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~fintud-macrep:dojo>
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An incomplete command goes into a multiline input buffer. Use
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the up-arrow (see the console history section) to get the last
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command back, edit it so it's just `%+ add 2`, and press return.
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You'll see:
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> %+ add 2
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~fintud-macrep/dojo<
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Enter `2`. You'll see:
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> %+ add 2
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2
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4
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~fintud-macrep/dojo>
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The full command that parses and runs is the concatenation of all
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the partial lines, with a space inserted between them. To clear
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all multiline input, just hit return on an empty prompt.
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### Command structure
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Every finished line is parsed into one `++dojo-command`:
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++ dojo-command ::
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$% [%edit p=path q=dojo-recipe] :: modify clay file
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[%http p=? q=purl r=dojo-recipe] :: http post or put
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[%poke p=goal q=dojo-recipe] :: send request
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[%save p=path q=dojo-recipe] :: replace clay file
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[%show p=dojo-recipe] :: print to console
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[%unix p=path q=dojo-recipe] :: export to unix
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[%verb p=term q=dojo-recipe] :: store variable
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== ::
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Each kind of `++dojo-command` is an action that depends on one
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noun production, a `++dojo-recipe`. We describe first the
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commands, then the recipes.
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##### `[%show p=dojo-recipe]`
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To print the product, the command is just the recipe:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> (add 2 2)
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##### `[%verb p=term q=dojo-recipe]`
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To save the product to a variable `foo`:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> =foo (add 2 2)
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`foo` goes into your Hoon subject (scope) and is available to all
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expressions.
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To unbind `foo`:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> =foo
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The dojo has a set of special variables, some read-write and some
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read-only: `dir`, `lib`, `arc`, `now`, `our`.
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The read-write specials are `dir`, `lib` and `arc`. `dir` is the beak
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(revision-control branch) and directory this session is operating in,
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and normally accessed/set with `%`. `lib` is a set of libraries, and
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`arc` a set of structures, to put in the Hoon subject.
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Read-only specials are `now`, the current (128-bit `@da`) time,
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and `our`, the current urbit.
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##### `[%edit p=path q=dojo-recipe]`
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##### `[%save p=path q=dojo-recipe]`
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The product is either a new version of, or a modification to,
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the Urbit file at the given path. (See the discussion of Urbit
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filesystem paths.)
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To save:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> *%/numbers/four (add 2 2)
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To edit:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> -%/numbers/four (add 2 2)
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A save (`*`) overwrites the current (if any) version of the file
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with a new version of any mark. The save command above will work
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(if you want `/numbers/four` at your current path).
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An edit (`-`) applies a diff whose mark has to match the diff
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mark for the current version of the file. The edit command above
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will not work, because evaluating a Hoon expression like `(add 2
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2)` just produces a `%noun` mark, ie, an arbitrary noun.
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For either saves or edits, the current version of the file must
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be the same version specified in the write -- in other words,
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we can only write to HEAD. If someone else has sneaked in a
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change since the version specified, the command will fail.
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##### `[%unix p=path q=dojo-recipe]`
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> ./numbers/four (add 2 2)
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The product is saved as a Unix file (its mark is translated
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to MIME, and the MIME type is mapped as the extension).
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##### `[%poke p=goal q=dojo-recipe]`
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A poke or *order* is a one-way transactional request. It either
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succeeds and returns no information, or fails and produces an
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error dump.
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Every order is sent to one daemon on one urbit. The default
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urbit is your urbit. The default daemon is the system daemon,
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`:hood`. The following syntactic forms are equivalent:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> :~fintud-macrep/hood (add 2 2)
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> :hood (add 2 2)
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> :~fintud-macrep (add 2 2)
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> : (add 2 2)
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Urbit pokes do not have a separate verb. The mark of the message
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defines the semantics of the operation. You don't call a method
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`foo` whose argument is a noun in mark `bar` -- you poke a noun
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in mark `bar`. The mark is the protocol is the method.
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If the order succeeds, you'll see an `>=` line. If not, you'll
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see an error report, typically with a stack trace.
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It's common (but not necessary) to use a custom generator for the
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daemon you're talking to. (For generators, see below.) Hence
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> :~fintud-macrep/fish +fish/catch (add 2 2)
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It's irritating to type "fish" twice, just because we're using a
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fish generator to talk to a fish daemon. Hence a shortcut:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> :~fintud-macrep/fish|catch (add 2 2)
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If we combine all these defaults, we get the "system command"
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shortcut:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> :~fintud-macrep/hood +hood/reload %ames
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> |reload %ames
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This is the most common poke, a generated message to your own
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hood.
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##### `[%http p=? q=purl r=dojo-recipe]`
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The Web has its own poke, unfortunately in two flavors. To POST,
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> +http://website.com (add 2 2)
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To PUT:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> -http://website.com (add 2 2)
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As with a poke, you'll get a >= for success, or an error report.
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#### Recipes, models and filters
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But wait, what's a recipe? Simplifying the actual code slightly:
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++ dojo-recipe :: functional build
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$% [%ex p=twig] :: hoon expression
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[%as p=mark q=dojo-recipe] :: format conversion
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[%do p=twig q=dojo-recipe] :: apply gate
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[%ge p=dojo-script] :: generator
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[%ur p=purl] :: get url
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[%tu p=(list dojo-recipe)] :: tuple
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== ::
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++ dojo-script :: script
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$: p=path :: core recipe
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q=dojo-config :: configuration
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== ::
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++ dojo-config :: configuration
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$: p=(list dojo-recipe) :: by order
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q=(map term (unit dojo-recipe)) :: by keyword
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== ::
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##### `[%ex p=twig]`
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The twig in an `%ex` recipe is a Hoon expression. The recipe
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syntax is just the Hoon syntax.
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The subject of the twig is a core stack: first the Hoon kernel,
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then the Arvo standard library, then the structures and libraries
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in `lib` and `arc`. On the very top are the dojo variables.
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A twig produces the trivial mark `%noun`, except in two cases
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where the dojo can do better. The dojo analyzes the twig to
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detect two trivial cases where direct evaluation gives us a mark:
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a variable reference like `foo` that matches a dojo variable, or
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an urbitspace dereference like `.^(/cx/~fintud-macrep/main/1/foo)`.
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In either case, if we executed these through Hoon, we'd get the
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same noun with the same span.
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##### `[%tu p=(list dojo-recipe)]`
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A is just a tuple of recipes, using the normal Hoon syntax for
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a tuple. `[a]` is `a`, `[a b]` the cell `[a b]`, `[a b c]` the
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cell `[a [b c]]`.
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A tuple, unless it's a trivial 1-tuple, is always marked `%noun`.
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##### `[%ge p=dojo-script]`
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A `%ge` is a generator, a configurable script loaded from the
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filesystem.
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The script recipe `++dojo-script` specifies a script path, a list
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of ordered arguments, and a list of keyword arguments. All the
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arguments are recipes. The path specifies a Hoon source file in
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`/===/gen/[path]`.
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For the path `/fun/make`, the ordered arguments `1`, `2` and `3`,
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and the named arguments `foo` and `bar`, the syntax is:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> +fun/make 1 2 3, =foo (add 2 2), =bar 42
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Unless this non-closed form is the end of a command, it needs to
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be surrounded by `[]` to make it play well with others.
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Generator programming is covered in the dojo developer's guide.
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The user doesn't need to know or notice how the generator gets
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its input (if any), except in one case: a dialog.
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A dialog generator will take over the prompt and ask you
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questions. If this seems terrifying, ^D will abort the dialog,
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the recipe, and the command, and take you back to the dojo.
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##### `[%as p=mark q=dojo-recipe]`
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`%as` is a mark conversion. Since the input to it is another
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recipe, we can chain them to make a conversion pipeline.
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To convert a recipe, just precede it with the converison form, `&mark`:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> &noun (add 2 2)
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> &md (add 50 7)
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##### `[%do p=twig q=dojo-recipe]`
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`%do` is a Hoon functino (gate) application. It can also be in a pipeline.
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Its syntax is a hoon expression preceeded by `_`:
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> _lore 'hello\0aworld'
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~fintud-macrep:dojo> _|=(a=@ (mul 3 a))} (add 2 2)
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##### `[%ur p=purl]`
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A simple HTTP get produces the result as a `%httr` noun.
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### Development
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Developing dojo generators is the easiest form of Hoon programming.
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Generator scripts are found in the `gen` folder.
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#### Configuration
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All generator scripts are configured with the same configuration gate:
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|= $: [now=@da eny=@ bec=beak]
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[arg=my-arguments opt=my-options]
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==
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We try to minimize boilerplate, but you can't get out of this
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one. The dojo will slam this configuration gate to create your
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generator.
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The head of the sample is a system context. `now` is the date of
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the call; `eny` is 256 bits of entropy; `bec` is a triple
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`[p=ship q=desk r=case]` (ie, the root of a filesystem path).
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This beak is the path to the script, not the current path within
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the dojo (dojo variables are not, unlike in Unix, visible to
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generator scripts).
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`arg` and `opt` are whatever you want them to be. (Use `~` if
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you have no arguments or options.) The dojo will replace `arg`
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with the user's ordered arguments, and replace any options in
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`opt` specified by the user's named arguments. (More exactly,
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if the user specifies `=foo 42`, your `opt` is replaced with
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`opt(foo 42)`.)
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Bear in mind that dojo syntax is list-centric, so your `arg` will
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always end with a `~`. For instance,
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~fintud-macrep/dojo> +fun/make 1 2 3
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will generate an `arg` of `[1 2 3 ~]`. Yes, this is the only
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place in Urbit where we do list-centric arguments.
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Note also that script configuration is typed. The user's command
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will fail if there's a type mismatch. But `arg` does not have to
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be a homogeneous list -- just a tuple with `~` on the end. Also,
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you can use `arg=*` and sort out the nouns by hand. Any value
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you don't care about can simply be `*`.
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#### Generators
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There are four kinds of generators: builders (with no special
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I/O), dialogs (which read console input), scrapers (which pull
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data from the webs), and synthesizers (which produce another
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generator). Any generator can use `.^` to both read from and
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block (wait for remote or delayed results) on the Urbit global
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namespace.
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A generator produces a cell whose tail is the configuration gate,
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and whose head is `%say` for a builder, `%ask` for a dialog,
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`%get` for a scraper, and `%con` for a constructor.
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#### Builders
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A builder just produces a cask (mark-value cell) directly from
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the configuration gate. Here's the simplest builder, with a
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blank configuration:
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:- %say |= *
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:- %noun
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"hello, world."
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#### Dialogs
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A dialog is a console input form. We recommend using the helpful
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`sole` structures, with
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/- *sole
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(If you're interested in building your own dialogs without `sole`
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(not that complicated at all), it's easiest to start by
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reverse-engineering `sole`.)
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Otherwise, a dialog boilerplate (with blank configuration), which
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generates a `my-result` result with mark `%my-result-mark`:
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:- %ask |= *
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^- (sole-result (cask my-result))
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%+ sole-so %my-result-mark
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*my-result
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Internally, a `++sole-result` is either a final result or a new
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dialog core with a new prompt. The dojo keeps running the dialog
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until it produces a final result.
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A dialog step can do one of three things: print a message, prompt
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for a value, or finish with a result. These are done with
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`sole-yo`, `sole-lo`, and `sole-so` respectively. Here's a
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simple dialog which uses all of them:
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:- %ask |= *
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^- (sole-result (cask ,@ud))
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%+ sole-yo leaf/"let's multiply two numbers..."
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%+ sole-lo [%& %number "number one: "]
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%+ sole-go dim:ag
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|= one=@ud
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%+ sole-lo [%& %number "number two: "]
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%+ sole-go dim:ag
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|= two=@ud
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%+ sole-so %noun
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(mul one two)
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`++sole-yo` prints a tank (prettyprint structure). See `++tank`
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in hoon.hoon.
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`++sole-lo` takes a prompt and a new dialog. In the example,
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`[%& %number "your number: "]` is a `++sole-prompt`. `&` as
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opposed to `|` means input is echoed (not a password).
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|
`%number` is a history label; all inputs with the same label
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|
share the same history buffer.
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|
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|
The `++sole-dialog` is generally built with `++sole-go`, as used
|
|
above. This takes a parsing `++rule` (here `dim:ag`, which
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|
parses a decimal), and a gate whose sample is the parsed value,
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|
producing a new dialog.
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|
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|
#### Scrapers
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|
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|
Most stuff on the internets is crap, but there's exceptions.
|
|
Sometimes it's nice to get it and compute functions on it.
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|
|
|
A scraper is much like a dialog, except instead of `sole-lo` and
|
|
`sole-go` it uses `sole-at`.
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|
|
|
:- %get |= *
|
|
%+ sole-yo leaf/"Fetching example.com"
|
|
%+ sole-at [[& ~ `/com/example] `/ ~]
|
|
|= hit=httr
|
|
%+ sole-yo leaf/"Fetched."
|
|
%+ sole-so %httr
|
|
hit
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|
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|
`++sole-at` takes a `purl` request url, and a gate through
|
|
which to slam the result `httr`.
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|
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|
#### Synthesizer
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|
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|
A synthesizer simply produces another recipe. Its
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|
|