IndieWebCamp Brighton 2024
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Last weekend we held IndieWebCamp Brighton 2024, the first in Brighton since 2019. I thought I'd collect my thoughts both as a host, and as an attendee…
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Last weekend we held IndieWebCamp Brighton 2024, the first in Brighton since 2019. I thought I'd collect my thoughts both as a host, and as an attendee…
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In 2001 I found myself falling down a mechanical keyboard rabbit hole. It started off with two ortholinear (keys laid out in a grid) keyboards requiring minimal assembly (mostly adding my own switches and key caps). From there I moved onto a split keyboard (one unit per hand, connected together by a cable) with a column staggered layout (keys are aligned in columns, rather than rows like a conventional keyboard). In the end it was inevitable that I would try to design my own, but what did I want…
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I've been tracking my Japanese language study session since 2022. You can see the first year report for comparison…
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Recently I had a problem where I had to find the first matching element of an
array by type. Ruby provides a method to return the first matching (or nil
)
element in an array, but sorbet isn't smart enough to type narrow it when the
match is related to the type of the element…
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When working with type systems like TypeScript or Sorbet, type narrowing patterns are a way to handle different types a variable may contain in different branches. For example…
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This time last year I put together some custom scripts to send a record of each study session to my personal site using the micropub endpoint. You can see them here. Each entry says what I did, how long I did it for, and when I started doing it. On their own these aren't particularly interesting or useful. They mostly serve to hold me accountable. However, now that I have a full year of data, it seems like a good time to see if there are any trends…
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Below is a procedural snowman. I'm using a little code to create Christmas
cards again this year, and as before I wanted each to be unique! If you received
a card from me, you may see something like ?seed=1234567890
in the URL bar.
That will be the random seed which generated your snowflake (and it's yours to
keep). To see a random snowflake, remove everything after the question mark and
hit enter. Refresh the page to see a fresh random snowman…
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I went to ffconf 2022 a couple of weeks ago, and two of the talks in particular resonated with me... (more actually, but these felt actionable)…
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The :has()
CSS pseudo-class opens up all sorts of possibilities. I
wanted to see if it could simplify how I handle the ruby text (annotations above
or below text to help with reading) in my Japanese notes. It works (in Safari
and Chrome at least, and hopefully Firefox soon)…
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I started a new role recently, and the company is large enough that there are a number of folk learning or proficient in Japanese as a second language…
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Markdown is the standard for writing in techie circles these days, but it's pretty minimal. For a readme it's all you need, but if you create a site around Markdown like I have then you pretty quickly bump into its limitations. Markdown is deliberately limited, so it's no fault of the language or its creator…
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Below is a procedural snowflake. I'm using a little code to create Christmas
cards this year, and I wanted each to be unique! If you received a card from me,
you may see something like ?seed=1234567890
in the URL bar. That will be the
random seed which generated your snowflake (and it's yours to keep). To see a
random snowflake, remove everything after the question mark and hit enter.
Refresh the page to see a fresh random snowflake…
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A generative patchwork of pastel colours. The colours begin with a randomly picked colour in LCH. Other colours are hue rotations in LCH space so that they're perceptually nice together. Feature detection is used to render using LCH colours when the browser supports them (Safari only at the time of writing), or to pick a close colour in RGB space when LCH is not supported (the code for this is based on code in d3-color). Refreshing generates a new patchwork…
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I had some issues getting the v3 AWS SDK for JavaScript to communicate with localstack S3, but I found a solution! With the V2 JS SDK, the configuration object for the S3 client looks like…
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This site uses a static site generator to build plain HTML pages. Since there's no database to add, update, or delete pages from, determining when to dispatch mentions can be challenging! Here's how I use a Netlify build plugin and an atom feed to manage it…
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I use marked
to do the markdown rendering for this blog. A recent
feature makes it possible to create custom block types with a little hacking. In
this post I show you how…
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Based on the last experiment, this one uses hexagonal grids rather than triangular ones. The way the SVG is constructed isn't pretty (a mish-mash of paths) but it gets the job done. I've given the two grids red and blue lines and a black background to make the moiré pattern stand out…
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This experiment was inspired by field of twistronics, the study of the intersesting properties of misaligned graphene sheets. The misalignment produces a moiré pattern which echoes the underlying structure. I'm too lazy to do hexagonal grids in an afternoon of tinkering so I used triangular grids instead…
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An experiment into generating SVG circles which don't overlap. It was timeboxed to an hour, so it's a little rough around the edges (but I think that adds to its charm)…
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It's been a while since my last maths heavy article. I enjoy writing these but struggle to find the time to write many…
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The graphic below is generated randomly and rendered as an SVG. Occasionally it glitches, but that's all part of the fun! It was inspired by a graphic seen in Charlotte Dann's ffconf 2019 talk at about 6:25 in. See the next post for a description of the maths I used to do this…
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The day was packed with interesting and diverse talks, and there's just too much to talk about in a single post. It's definitely worth searching around for other blog posts to see other's takes on the day…
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I had a great time last weekend at IndieWebCamp (IWC) Brighton. The first day was filled with discussions on various IndieWeb related topics. I attended discussions on…
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That's right! After more than a year of talking about adding a dark mode I
finally did it. The wider support for
prefers-color-scheme
is what pushed me over the edge.
I'm also a slave to fashion…
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I mentioned a new service which handles webmentions in a previous post. I decided to replace the glitch I've been using for one which is much leaner. It uses the library which powers webmention.app to handle webmention (and also older technologies like pingback) endpoint discovery and mention dispatch so I took this opportunity to ditch my own discovery code…
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In a previous post I talked about an npm script I had written to be executed by a GitHub action…
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I really like webmentions. They provide a way to let folk know that you're writing about their blog posts. I see them as an alternative to comments which encourages better discourse…
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In the past I used atd to schedule the publication of my blog posts. When I moved to Netlify I lost the ability to schedule posts, and didn't think about it until a recent conversation on twitter with Remy Sharp. Remy asked how to schedule blog posts for static sites and it got me thinking…
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I made the source code for this site public! You can find it here. I've written at length about how I've built this, and having the code makes it easier to point to particular lines. I hope it'll inspire you to do the same…
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This week started off a little boring. On the Thursday though, the rebooted Brighton Homebrew Website Club met at Clearleft. After catching up with the folk there, I worked on an experiment to theme this blog, with the theme determined by a toggle in localStorage
. By placing an inline script in the head right after the stylesheet link tag, I demonstrated that it's possible to select a theme before a paint, avoiding an awkward flash of the wrong theme. This may not news to anyone but me. I've not implemented anything just yet…
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This edition really covers the last two weeks…
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This is my first go at writing a weeknotes entry, and this week has been a busy one…
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I've made a couple of small contributions to Node.js in the past. These were quite esoteric, and unlikely to be discovered or noticed by most developers. Recently I made a contribution which might be noticed though…
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My resolution this year was to work on my Japanese speaking ability…
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I've been working on this post for a while, but about a month ago my firstborn arrived, and he's been getting the lion's share of my attention. I start work again tomorrow, so I decided to just publish this post and be done with it. Apologies if it's a little rough around the edges…
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Nested resources are common in real life, and when you're a programmer working on RESTful APIs you may have noticed that there are often trade-offs when it comes to formatting the routes of nested resources…
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It occurred to me a couple of days ago that it'd be neat to build a glitch to announce new blog posts. Since I deploy this blog by pushing to a master branch on GitHub, creation of a blog post is somewhat less obvious than when publishing on a platform like wordpress or medium, so I needed to figure out another approach…
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In celebration of the Battenberg theme, here is an animated Battenberg! It's
made of two SVG paths composed of lines and arcs. These are calculated using
three angles and a bucket load of trigonometry (I'm not as good as I used to be
at trig). A requestAnimationFrame
loop updates these angles and the paths.
Click on start to begin the animation. You can tweak the angular speeds using
the three number inputs…
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I was recently tripped over by a subtlety in how service worker fetch events and fetch works in conjunction with content security policy (CSP). This happened while adding an image to the about page. This post is the result of a conversation I had with Jake Archibald on twitter (with thanks for helping me to understand what was going on)…
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In a recent post I wrote that I had integrated webmentions, and some of that has since changed. Time for an update…
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When I originally built this blog, I gave it a very simple no nonsense theme. One colour (beige) for the background and black for text and the odd horizontal rule. After a couple of minor iterations I added a sticky navigation bar (in CSS, no JS)…
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In the last post about this blog I wrote about why I removed the service worker which made this blog a progressive web application…
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It's been a while since the last entry about how I've built this blog. Since it is constantly evolving, now seems as good a time as ever to write about some of the changes I've made…
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I’ve noticed when helping people to learn JS is that I’m happy to let them learn without any tools. In hindsight this is very strange. I wouldn’t dream of programming like this! I make mistakes all the time, and tools help me to catch them early. Tools also help me to streamline repetitive tasks…
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SPOILER ALERT: If you're doing the 2017 Advent of Code, you may not want to read onward…
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SPOILER ALERT: If you're doing the advent of code this year, you may not want to read onward. This post does not give any solutions away, but does contain information about how I approached a part of the first challenge…
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After some years of browser vendors working out what web components should look like, they're almost ready for the prime time. The part which I find most intriguing (custom elements) has finally stabilised. With custom elements, you can make new HTML elements which have custom behaviour which you define using JavaScript. In this post I'll demonstrate a custom element for fuzzy counting…
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I've recently been attempting to code a clone of the classic game asteroids using canvas in the browser. Since this is me, I've been distracted by all sorts of programming detours…
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I recently got it into my head that I wanted to build an arcade control panel from parts. Specifically, an 8 way digital joystick and a bunch of buttons. How it'll look when finished isn't important at the moment. It's enough now to say that there'll be a joystick, six regular buttons, and two buttons for start and select use…
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To many experienced Node developers, the title of this post will seem intuitively obvious. Nevertheless, it's useful to see what unexpected behaviour can occur when the two are used together. Here's an example…
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I recently attended ffconf, and was introduced to position: sticky;
. Support
for it is patchy, but where not available the header will scroll out of view as
it did in the past. Where available, the navbar will stick to the top of the
window when the rest of the header is scrolled out of view…
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When I first put together the CSS for this blog I avoided a fixed header since the header felt a bit large, and I didn't want to take up too much space which could be used for content…
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The npm CLI has a bunch of useful utilities for managing projects. The obvious
one is npm test
but there are others. I particularly like working with
npm version
(the subject of this tip)…
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ES2015 bought a Set
constructor to JavaScript. It's pretty barebones,
consisting of a constructor which creates objects with a few methods for adding,
removing, checking if something is a member, and iterating over the set.
Instances have the essential quality of a set; an item is a member of the set or
not a member. Unlike an array, an item cannot be an element more than once. In
other words you can avoid using arrays and doing a lot of indexOf
checking…
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Just before Christmas I gave a presentation on the upcoming async-await JavaScript language feature, its basis in promises and generators, and finally a tiny server framework (like Express but a lot leaner and more modular) which can make use of async functions as middleware (since an async function is indistinguishable from a normal function which returns a promise). I'll introduce Toisu! in a blog post soon, but until then here's the presentation…
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I use instanceof
a lot in JavaScript. It's very handy when writing unit tests. It's easier to do
an instanceof
check than it is to exhaustively probe an object…
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This is a short companion to an
earlier article I wrote on using WeakMap
for
private data with JS classes. While private data belongs to instances, private methods can be shared
between instances of a class (just like its regular methods). An implementation using ES2015 modules
looks like…
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This blog is built with a static site generator. The generator, the markdown source files, and the generated HTML files are all kept together in the same git repository. Every time I commit a change, a pre-commit hook runs the generator and adds the generated HTML, so that the blog entries are always up to date. Then the changes are pushed up to GitHub…
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I touched briefly on the technology used in this blog in a previous post, but I didn't explain the motivation behind a lot of the choices I made when building it. I'd like to do that in this post. The design and architecture of this blog is the product of what things I like in other blogs, and also those things that I find frustrating. Where a choice was not obvious, I opted for the simplest option. The point of the exercise was to get it online. Below are a few points in no particular order…
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This blog took a long time to get started. Every time I tried to build it, I wound up focussed on some tech I wanted to use to host it. In the previous iteration, I even wrote a server framework. I took some holiday over the Christmas period, so I decided to throw everything away and make something minimal…
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Private data has always been awkward in JavaScript. It's particularly difficult when it comes to constructors, and with ES2015 recently published, classes too. Let's say we have an example class, exported by an ES2015 module…