Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2014-01-20 Thread Tom Faulhaber


On Monday, November 11, 2013 6:38:23 AM UTC-8, Brenton wrote:

 If you are looking for something that is finished and stable then do not 
 look at Pedestal. We will indicate stability with version numbers. When you 
 see a release of version 1.0 then you may want to have another look. A 1.0 
 release will not happen until we have thorough reference documentation.


If I waited for Clojure libraries to go to 1.0, I still be in Python or 
Java! (Not quite true, but within epsilon.)

Just scroll through the topics of this list for confirmation. Even within 
the Clojure organization, the only project that's made it to 1.0 is Clojure 
core on the JVM.
 

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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-12-21 Thread Murtaza Husain
I dont know much about the third project so will comment on Pedestal and 
Om. I see both of these projects as complimentary - 

1. Pedestal concerns itself with propagating the change in your state, and 
wiring the dependencies within it. Its sort of dataflow/FRP in cljs. 

2. Om/react.js in concerned with taking a state and rendering it 
efficiently. 

So pedestal events/msgs can be easily flow to Om bindings, which re-renders 
the DOM. 

Looking forward to the next pedestal release which will simplify things. 
And also looking forward to the rapidly evolving Om framework. 

Thanks,
Murtaza


On Saturday, December 21, 2013 1:44:15 AM UTC+5:30, Thomas Deutsch wrote:

 As far as i can read the community, there are 3 Projects that use the UI 
 as a value.

 - Pedestal http://pedestal.io/ 
 - Omhttp://swannodette.github.io/2013/12/17/the-future-of-javascript-mvcs/
 - Aurora http://www.chris-granger.com/ ( comming early 2014 )

 As a Clojure community we know the value of 
 valueshttp://www.infoq.com/presentations/Value-Values, 
 and for a UI as a value we will have Immediate 
 Modehttps://mollyrocket.com/861 
 on the view side of things,
 because we want to reflect our value (a clojure/script data type) to the 
 DOM.
 It seems that all 3 Projects could use react.js because:
 *react.js is the immediate mode abstraction over the retained mode 
 dom*(Chris Granger)

 Does Pedestal have a future in the long run?
 I hope that pedestal will be simple, and open to a solution to use 
 react.js or any immediate mode abstraction lib that will come along.




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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-12-20 Thread Thomas Deutsch
As far as i can read the community, there are 3 Projects that use the UI as 
a value.

- Pedestal http://pedestal.io/ 
- Omhttp://swannodette.github.io/2013/12/17/the-future-of-javascript-mvcs/
- Aurora http://www.chris-granger.com/ ( comming early 2014 )

As a Clojure community we know the value of 
valueshttp://www.infoq.com/presentations/Value-Values, 
and for a UI as a value we will have Immediate 
Modehttps://mollyrocket.com/861 
on the view side of things,
because we want to reflect our value (a clojure/script data type) to the 
DOM.
It seems that all 3 Projects could use react.js because:
*react.js is the immediate mode abstraction over the retained mode dom*(Chris 
Granger)

Does Pedestal have a future in the long run?
I hope that pedestal will be simple, and open to a solution to use react.js 
or any immediate mode abstraction lib that will come along.


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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-19 Thread Geraldo Lopes de Souza
As for UI.  

Isnt reactjs (facebook renderer library) a good fit for pedestal ?

it appears to use the same ideas of webfui. Webfui's author even 
complimented reacjts guys for their work: 
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/reactjs/conrad/reactjs/e3bYersyd64/fH83IFqXb2oJ

There are a recent integration with our beloved clojurescript.
https://github.com/piranha/pump

An extern:
https://github.com/steida/este-library/blob/master/externs/react.js

And look at this Flux thing:
https://github.com/cascadiajs/2013.cascadiajs.com/blob/master/a-better-way-to-structure-clientside-apps_jingc.md
(Imutable structures and getting away from two way data binding)


On Tuesday, November 19, 2013 5:26:52 AM UTC-2, Murtaza Husain wrote:


 I also personally like pedestal. However couple of reasons are holding me 
 back - 

 1) An easier integration with UI. All current frameworks such as Angular 
 etc focus on easing the DOM manipulation. You define your model, and then 
 define the relationship of your model with the DOM. The framework then 
 takes care of it. 

 Inversely pedestal focuses on easing the state management / event 
 propagation for a web app. Yes this is a big concern on big single page 
 apps. However most of the apps I work with, the former, DOM manipulation is 
 the concern that dominates. 

 Thus introduction of a nice widget system, which provides facilities for 
 the former will go a long way to accelerate the adoption of pedestal.

 2) Another problem is the cognitive load in developing a pedestal app. 
 There are too many settings, multiple ways to do the same things, concepts 
 that seem to overlap, lack of simple easy to grasp recipe type examples. 

 I would like to have an easy way to start and develop with pedestal. There 
 is too much to learn before you write your first line of code, and I dont 
 even think I can ask a new developer to just go and learn pedestal on his 
 own. So please bring down the barrier. 

 Hope to use pedestal on my projects soon. And a big thanks to the pedestal 
 team for this amazing piece of code. 

 Thanks,
 Murtaza


 On Tuesday, November 12, 2013 10:44:38 AM UTC+5:30, Mars0i wrote:

 Thanks, Cedric, for insightful comments about documentation.

 I'll add that for me, if the only documentation is a video, I have to 
 *really* want to learn about a programming tool to go any further.  Videos 
 don't allow you to take in information any faster than  information at 
 exactly the speed at which the video presents it.  Reading lets you go 
 faster, or slower, or visually decide what to skip, or find passages by 
 their content.  Even without hyperlinks.  (Yes, when motion matters, video 
 is nice.)

 On Monday, November 11, 2013 12:04:09 AM UTC-6, Cedric Greevey wrote:

 IMO it can often be a lack of readable, searchable, nice-to-navigate 
 text/hypertext that can be a barrier to entry. In fact all of these are 
 unfortunately common in various parts of the geekosphere:

 1. Projects whose *only* documentation (or the only version of certain 
 key information) is in videos. Not searchable. Not easy to navigate to a 
 particular part (need to remember roughly when it is, or rewatch half the 
 thing). Expensive for mobile users with capped or per-megabyte data plans.



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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-11 Thread Manuel Paccagnella
Very exaustive comment, that reminded me of a beautiful series of articles 
by Jacob Kaplan-Moss on Writing great 
documentationhttp://jacobian.org/writing/great-documentation/. 
There is a 
presentationhttp://pyvideo.org/video/403/pycon-2011--writing-great-documentation,
 
too.

Il giorno lunedì 11 novembre 2013 07:04:09 UTC+1, Cedric Greevey ha scritto:

 IMO it can often be a lack of readable, searchable, nice-to-navigate 
 text/hypertext that can be a barrier to entry. In fact all of these are 
 unfortunately common in various parts of the geekosphere:

 1. Projects whose *only* documentation (or the only version of certain key 
 information) is in videos. Not searchable. Not easy to navigate to a 
 particular part (need to remember roughly when it is, or rewatch half the 
 thing). Expensive for mobile users with capped or per-megabyte data plans.

 2. Projects whose *only* documentation is reference-type material that 
 does not introduce the library/whatever to total n00bs. A common case is 
 for there to be beautifully detailed Javadoc for every public class, 
 method, and constant in some Java library, but nothing to give a n00b a 
 clue as to where to start using it. Sometimes it's fairly obvious (there's 
 a problem domain class Foo that it makes sense to instantiate first, and 
 that class has a public constructor, has a public static getInstance 
 method, or sits next to a FooFactory class in the same package, and this is 
 well-documented) but often it's not. Regardless, it would be preferable for 
 there to be a getting started guide. With a textual version that can be 
 searched with grep or other tools.

 3. Projects whose *only* documentation is a getting-started guide, tour, 
 tutorial, or similar. When one knows the basic patterns of usage but wants 
 to recall the argument order for the (burbling-mumblefrotz ...) function, 
 having to find where it was introduced in a tutorial (which chapter? The 
 one on mumbling or the one on burbling? Near the start, middle, or end? 
 Page 2 or 29???) is a pain in the neck. A reference is organized 
 differently, for making a specific known entity easy to re-find. Javadocs 
 and Clojure docstrings are good for this.

 In particular:

 * Every key fact, example, or other piece of documentation should exist 
 somewhere in a form that Google can find on the web and grep can find in 
 your local copy if you make one. And that local copy shouldn't cost a 
 fortune to download and a ton-lot of disk space to keep, nor should it be a 
 pain in the ass to scroll forward and backward through. Ideally, it should 
 be browseable on a fairly low-spec machine if need be, as well, even one 
 that makes video playback stutter at 3 FPS.

 * There needs to be two differently organized written forms of 
 documentation: one oriented around discovering how to do X, for people that 
 don't know the name of the function, class, method, or other entity that 
 does X; and one oriented around specifying precisely the usage, behavior, 
 and applicable preconditions/gotchas/etc. of a particular function, method, 
 class, or whatever that one *does* know the name to. The latter is 
 typically partly machine-generated and organized hierarchically and 
 alphabetically by package/namespace and name. The former tends to be mainly 
 human-authored and often linear, or at most a few branches, of exposition, 
 which shows how the parts are interrelated and how to build up from those 
 parts to useful working systems of some sort.

 Videos do have their uses, but should not be regarded as *substitutes* for 
 either written reference documentation or written tutorial documentation, 
 and the latter are not substitutes for one another. I'd regard a lack of 
 good *written* introductory material as a much worse barrier to entry than 
 a lack of good videos, where the subject matter lends itself to textual 
 exposition (math, programming). (That last restriction of scope is 
 necessary; no amount of written material telling people how to play golf, 
 for instance, is likely to beat a good video showing a proper stance and 
 backswing. Gross motor skills in general benefit strongly from, at minimum, 
 video clips of key moves/actions. Most things benefit from the occasional 
 illustrative still image, however.)



 On Sun, Nov 10, 2013 at 10:10 AM, Ryan Waters ryan@gmail.comjavascript:
  wrote:

 Thank you Saravana.  I'm finding a number of the posts David Nolen [1] 
 has written on his blog to be invaluable.  Once I figure out what mix of 
 libraries I'll be using I can let you know!

 [1] http://swannodette.github.io/


 On Sat, Nov 9, 2013 at 12:33 PM, Ryan Neufeld 
 ry...@cognitect.comjavascript:
  wrote:

 Stuart Halloway is doing a presentation and we’ll be dumping a lot more 
 new stuff into the repository. I made a mistake in saying we had an 
 announcement, it’s more just that we’ll be talking more publicly about what 
 we’re working on following next week.

 -Ryan 

  
 On 

Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-11 Thread Brenton
I would like to clarify a few things.

All of the comments below are about Pedestal app.

Pedestal is a continuation of ClojureScript One. The reason that we didn't 
continue to commit changes to that project was because of all of the 
documentation.

Pedestal has changed a lot from the beginning and continues to change. This 
change has definitely been moving toward a goal and I think we are getting 
very close to that goal. Once Pedestal is stable it will be simpler, 
smaller and easier to understand and use in a variety of ways. I agree with 
many of the comments above about what a finished project should look like. 
This is not a finished project. At this point, increasing adoption is not 
the goal. If you are looking at Pedestal now then you are an early adopter 
and you accept the risks that go along with being an early adopter. You are 
on the bleeding edge. Sometimes there is a lot of blood on the bleeding 
edge.

If you are looking for something that is finished and stable then do not 
look at Pedestal. We will indicate stability with version numbers. When you 
see a release of version 1.0 then you may want to have another look. A 1.0 
release will not happen until we have thorough reference documentation.

There has been a lot of change because we really do care about this and 
want to get it right. We will continue to do this until we as a team 
believe that we have got it right.

Brenton

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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-11 Thread Manuel Paccagnella
Thank you for your explanation Brenton, makes a whole lot of sense. Now 
it's clear what the maturity level of Pedestal is: I'll way a little bit 
more before starting to bleed :)

Il giorno lunedì 11 novembre 2013 15:38:23 UTC+1, Brenton ha scritto:

 I would like to clarify a few things.

 All of the comments below are about Pedestal app.

 Pedestal is a continuation of ClojureScript One. The reason that we didn't 
 continue to commit changes to that project was because of all of the 
 documentation.

 Pedestal has changed a lot from the beginning and continues to change. 
 This change has definitely been moving toward a goal and I think we are 
 getting very close to that goal. Once Pedestal is stable it will be 
 simpler, smaller and easier to understand and use in a variety of ways. I 
 agree with many of the comments above about what a finished project should 
 look like. This is not a finished project. At this point, increasing 
 adoption is not the goal. If you are looking at Pedestal now then you are 
 an early adopter and you accept the risks that go along with being an early 
 adopter. You are on the bleeding edge. Sometimes there is a lot of blood on 
 the bleeding edge.

 If you are looking for something that is finished and stable then do not 
 look at Pedestal. We will indicate stability with version numbers. When you 
 see a release of version 1.0 then you may want to have another look. A 1.0 
 release will not happen until we have thorough reference documentation.

 There has been a lot of change because we really do care about this and 
 want to get it right. We will continue to do this until we as a team 
 believe that we have got it right.

 Brenton


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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-11 Thread Zubair Quraishi
As the author of another Clojure web framework, clojure on Coils (
https://github.com/zubairq/coils) I would say that Pedestal has got a very 
bright future ahead of it. Not only is it technically pretty amazing but 
the community behind it and the fact that it comes from the same team as 
the main Clojure and Clojurescript committers means that it will be the 
de-facto standard when large companies want to choose a Clojure web 
framework. I know that I have built a Clojure web framework myself, but my 
own framework Coils is more directed at non-clojure people, so there is a 
bigger learning curve of learning Clojure as well. Pedestal is definitely a 
better choice for people who already know or use Clojure

On Thursday, November 7, 2013 11:30:59 PM UTC+1, Marko Kocić wrote:

 Hi all,

 I'd like to hear opinions about Pedestal from the people that have been 
 playing more with it. Right now I started looking at it, and like some of 
 the things, but not sure should I invest more time learning it. While I do 
 like some concepts, I'm not sure is it going to became abandonware like 
 Clojurescript One (does anyone reemembers it anymore).

 So far, after initial splash, I haven't seen large community interest in 
 it. The number of aproachable getting started guides and hands on tutorials 
 is missing. That might change over time, but I'm afraid that next year this 
 time we'll get another Clojurescript one page application framework not 
 much related with Pedestal. How serious Cognitect/Relevance is about it?

 Best regards,
 Marko



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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-11 Thread Mars0i
Thanks, Cedric, for insightful comments about documentation.

I'll add that for me, if the only documentation is a video, I have to 
*really* want to learn about a programming tool to go any further.  Videos 
don't allow you to take in information any faster than  information at 
exactly the speed at which the video presents it.  Reading lets you go 
faster, or slower, or visually decide what to skip, or find passages by 
their content.  Even without hyperlinks.  (Yes, when motion matters, video 
is nice.)

On Monday, November 11, 2013 12:04:09 AM UTC-6, Cedric Greevey wrote:

 IMO it can often be a lack of readable, searchable, nice-to-navigate 
 text/hypertext that can be a barrier to entry. In fact all of these are 
 unfortunately common in various parts of the geekosphere:

 1. Projects whose *only* documentation (or the only version of certain key 
 information) is in videos. Not searchable. Not easy to navigate to a 
 particular part (need to remember roughly when it is, or rewatch half the 
 thing). Expensive for mobile users with capped or per-megabyte data plans.


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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-10 Thread PublicFarley
I hope that this time around the Pedestal talk will be recorded. The lack of 
any nice recorded video talks discussing Pedestal has been an additional 
barrier to entry.

- Farley 

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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-10 Thread Ryan Waters
Thank you Saravana.  I'm finding a number of the posts David Nolen [1] has
written on his blog to be invaluable.  Once I figure out what mix of
libraries I'll be using I can let you know!

[1] http://swannodette.github.io/


On Sat, Nov 9, 2013 at 12:33 PM, Ryan Neufeld r...@cognitect.com wrote:

 Stuart Halloway is doing a presentation and we’ll be dumping a lot more
 new stuff into the repository. I made a mistake in saying we had an
 announcement, it’s more just that we’ll be talking more publicly about what
 we’re working on following next week.

 -Ryan


 On November 8, 2013 at 5:39:34 PM, Andreas Liljeqvist 
 (bon...@gmail.com//bon...@gmail.com)
 wrote:

  Will there by any presentation on Pedestal, or just announcements?


 On Fri, Nov 8, 2013 at 1:38 AM, Ryan Neufeld r...@thinkrelevance.comwrote:

 Speaking as a core Pedestal team member and engineer at Cognitect I can
 say we are *very* serious about continuing to grow and support Pedestal.
 It may be quiet, but we're using the entirety of Pedestal with a number of
 client and are fervently preparing a number of new features and
 improvements we plan to announce at the Conj next week. Further, we've even
 begun selling commercial support that includes Pedestal[1].

 ClojureScript One was a huge influence on pedestal-app, but you're
 completely right that we've abandoned it and should probably wind things
 down there.

 Are there any other questions I can field while I'm here?

  -Ryan

 [1]: http://cognitect.com/Cognitect-Support-Services.pdf


 On Thursday, November 7, 2013 5:30:59 PM UTC-5, Marko Kocić wrote:

 Hi all,

 I'd like to hear opinions about Pedestal from the people that have been
 playing more with it. Right now I started looking at it, and like some of
 the things, but not sure should I invest more time learning it. While I do
 like some concepts, I'm not sure is it going to became abandonware like
 Clojurescript One (does anyone reemembers it anymore).

 So far, after initial splash, I haven't seen large community interest in
 it. The number of aproachable getting started guides and hands on tutorials
 is missing. That might change over time, but I'm afraid that next year this
 time we'll get another Clojurescript one page application framework not
 much related with Pedestal. How serious Cognitect/Relevance is about it?

 Best regards,
 Marko

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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-10 Thread Cedric Greevey
IMO it can often be a lack of readable, searchable, nice-to-navigate
text/hypertext that can be a barrier to entry. In fact all of these are
unfortunately common in various parts of the geekosphere:

1. Projects whose *only* documentation (or the only version of certain key
information) is in videos. Not searchable. Not easy to navigate to a
particular part (need to remember roughly when it is, or rewatch half the
thing). Expensive for mobile users with capped or per-megabyte data plans.

2. Projects whose *only* documentation is reference-type material that does
not introduce the library/whatever to total n00bs. A common case is for
there to be beautifully detailed Javadoc for every public class, method,
and constant in some Java library, but nothing to give a n00b a clue as to
where to start using it. Sometimes it's fairly obvious (there's a problem
domain class Foo that it makes sense to instantiate first, and that class
has a public constructor, has a public static getInstance method, or sits
next to a FooFactory class in the same package, and this is
well-documented) but often it's not. Regardless, it would be preferable for
there to be a getting started guide. With a textual version that can be
searched with grep or other tools.

3. Projects whose *only* documentation is a getting-started guide, tour,
tutorial, or similar. When one knows the basic patterns of usage but wants
to recall the argument order for the (burbling-mumblefrotz ...) function,
having to find where it was introduced in a tutorial (which chapter? The
one on mumbling or the one on burbling? Near the start, middle, or end?
Page 2 or 29???) is a pain in the neck. A reference is organized
differently, for making a specific known entity easy to re-find. Javadocs
and Clojure docstrings are good for this.

In particular:

* Every key fact, example, or other piece of documentation should exist
somewhere in a form that Google can find on the web and grep can find in
your local copy if you make one. And that local copy shouldn't cost a
fortune to download and a ton-lot of disk space to keep, nor should it be a
pain in the ass to scroll forward and backward through. Ideally, it should
be browseable on a fairly low-spec machine if need be, as well, even one
that makes video playback stutter at 3 FPS.

* There needs to be two differently organized written forms of
documentation: one oriented around discovering how to do X, for people that
don't know the name of the function, class, method, or other entity that
does X; and one oriented around specifying precisely the usage, behavior,
and applicable preconditions/gotchas/etc. of a particular function, method,
class, or whatever that one *does* know the name to. The latter is
typically partly machine-generated and organized hierarchically and
alphabetically by package/namespace and name. The former tends to be mainly
human-authored and often linear, or at most a few branches, of exposition,
which shows how the parts are interrelated and how to build up from those
parts to useful working systems of some sort.

Videos do have their uses, but should not be regarded as *substitutes* for
either written reference documentation or written tutorial documentation,
and the latter are not substitutes for one another. I'd regard a lack of
good *written* introductory material as a much worse barrier to entry than
a lack of good videos, where the subject matter lends itself to textual
exposition (math, programming). (That last restriction of scope is
necessary; no amount of written material telling people how to play golf,
for instance, is likely to beat a good video showing a proper stance and
backswing. Gross motor skills in general benefit strongly from, at minimum,
video clips of key moves/actions. Most things benefit from the occasional
illustrative still image, however.)



On Sun, Nov 10, 2013 at 10:10 AM, Ryan Waters ryan.or...@gmail.com wrote:

 Thank you Saravana.  I'm finding a number of the posts David Nolen [1]
 has written on his blog to be invaluable.  Once I figure out what mix of
 libraries I'll be using I can let you know!

 [1] http://swannodette.github.io/


 On Sat, Nov 9, 2013 at 12:33 PM, Ryan Neufeld r...@cognitect.com wrote:

 Stuart Halloway is doing a presentation and we’ll be dumping a lot more
 new stuff into the repository. I made a mistake in saying we had an
 announcement, it’s more just that we’ll be talking more publicly about what
 we’re working on following next week.

 -Ryan


 On November 8, 2013 at 5:39:34 PM, Andreas Liljeqvist 
 (bon...@gmail.com//bon...@gmail.com)
 wrote:

  Will there by any presentation on Pedestal, or just announcements?


 On Fri, Nov 8, 2013 at 1:38 AM, Ryan Neufeld r...@thinkrelevance.comwrote:

 Speaking as a core Pedestal team member and engineer at Cognitect I can
 say we are *very* serious about continuing to grow and support
 Pedestal. It may be quiet, but we're using the entirety of Pedestal with a
 number of client and are fervently 

Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-10 Thread Mark Engelberg
Recently, when I decided to investigate Pedestal for a project, I was
surprised to discover that it isn't supported on Windows.   I can't say
whether lack of cross-platform support will have any impact on Pedestal's
long-term viability, but it ruled Pedestal out for me.

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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-09 Thread Ryan Neufeld
Stuart Halloway is doing a presentation and we’ll be dumping a lot more new 
stuff into the repository. I made a mistake in saying we had an announcement, 
it’s more just that we’ll be talking more publicly about what we’re working on 
following next week.

-Ryan 


On November 8, 2013 at 5:39:34 PM, Andreas Liljeqvist (bon...@gmail.com) wrote:

Will there by any presentation on Pedestal, or just announcements?


On Fri, Nov 8, 2013 at 1:38 AM, Ryan Neufeld r...@thinkrelevance.com wrote:
Speaking as a core Pedestal team member and engineer at Cognitect I can say we 
are very serious about continuing to grow and support Pedestal. It may be 
quiet, but we're using the entirety of Pedestal with a number of client and are 
fervently preparing a number of new features and improvements we plan to 
announce at the Conj next week. Further, we've even begun selling commercial 
support that includes Pedestal[1].

ClojureScript One was a huge influence on pedestal-app, but you're completely 
right that we've abandoned it and should probably wind things down there.

Are there any other questions I can field while I'm here?

-Ryan

[1]: http://cognitect.com/Cognitect-Support-Services.pdf


On Thursday, November 7, 2013 5:30:59 PM UTC-5, Marko Kocić wrote:
Hi all,

I'd like to hear opinions about Pedestal from the people that have been playing 
more with it. Right now I started looking at it, and like some of the things, 
but not sure should I invest more time learning it. While I do like some 
concepts, I'm not sure is it going to became abandonware like Clojurescript One 
(does anyone reemembers it anymore).

So far, after initial splash, I haven't seen large community interest in it. 
The number of aproachable getting started guides and hands on tutorials is 
missing. That might change over time, but I'm afraid that next year this time 
we'll get another Clojurescript one page application framework not much related 
with Pedestal. How serious Cognitect/Relevance is about it?

Best regards,
Marko

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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-08 Thread Ryan Neufeld
Shhh! Don't spill the beans.

On Friday, November 8, 2013 1:02:36 AM UTC-5, Daniel wrote:

 I suspect Pedestal adoption will really take off once it has a well 
 designed and advertised widget/ui toolkit.  Just my two cents.

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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-08 Thread Andreas Liljeqvist
Will there by any presentation on Pedestal, or just announcements?


On Fri, Nov 8, 2013 at 1:38 AM, Ryan Neufeld r...@thinkrelevance.comwrote:

 Speaking as a core Pedestal team member and engineer at Cognitect I can
 say we are *very* serious about continuing to grow and support Pedestal.
 It may be quiet, but we're using the entirety of Pedestal with a number of
 client and are fervently preparing a number of new features and
 improvements we plan to announce at the Conj next week. Further, we've even
 begun selling commercial support that includes Pedestal[1].

 ClojureScript One was a huge influence on pedestal-app, but you're
 completely right that we've abandoned it and should probably wind things
 down there.

 Are there any other questions I can field while I'm here?

 -Ryan

 [1]: http://cognitect.com/Cognitect-Support-Services.pdf


 On Thursday, November 7, 2013 5:30:59 PM UTC-5, Marko Kocić wrote:

 Hi all,

 I'd like to hear opinions about Pedestal from the people that have been
 playing more with it. Right now I started looking at it, and like some of
 the things, but not sure should I invest more time learning it. While I do
 like some concepts, I'm not sure is it going to became abandonware like
 Clojurescript One (does anyone reemembers it anymore).

 So far, after initial splash, I haven't seen large community interest in
 it. The number of aproachable getting started guides and hands on tutorials
 is missing. That might change over time, but I'm afraid that next year this
 time we'll get another Clojurescript one page application framework not
 much related with Pedestal. How serious Cognitect/Relevance is about it?

 Best regards,
 Marko

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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-08 Thread Ryan Waters
Pedestal-app and pedestal-service seem like they have a lot of solid design
behind them and there's quite a few bright people that have put time into
development and documentation.  I don't doubt Cognitect's dedication to the
project or their ability to derive productivity from it.

I program in clojure on a part-time basis and when I first learned about
pedestal (specifically pedestal-app) it was very promising.  I wanted to
see if the next website I made (using clojurescript in the browser and
clojure on the server) would be a good match for pedestal and I've spent
the past couple months reading (and re-reading ... and re-reading ...) the
available pedestal-app documentation, pedestal sample apps and especially
the app-tutorial.

After many hours I've decided to move away from pedestal-app, at least for
the time being.  Earlier I had done some proof-of-concept UI stuff with C2
(think moving an array of images a la google maps) which went pretty well.
 It was my first time learning and using clojurescript and C2; cljsbuild
was a delight.  I decided the next step was to try to take what I had and
translate that into pedestal-app.  The message oriented communication
between different parts of the app, the ability to build client-server
communication without a server, the ability to step through recordings of
app interactions for testing, shared clojure / clojurescript code, etc.
were all very appealing.  Especially compared to plain javascript in a
browser, there's the ability to use clojurescript (a win), the ability to
avoid callback mess (which can also be avoided through FRP stuff like
javelin), and a message oriented architecture (which seems superior to
FRP?) which all made pedestal very compelling.

Each time I worked with pedestal-app I would make some progress but
progress was slow.  I was wading through a swamp of maybe strange
convention and overcomplication.  app-tutorial was at times illuminating
and cryptic; each read through would teach me something that I thought
could have been, perhaps, better explained than it was.  I wanted to
re-write the whole of app-tutorial and offer it up as supplemental
documentation but I wanted to work on my website more.

Another aspect to my story is that I don't know of anyone else that uses
any of this stuff so outlets for questions are limited to mailings lists
and IRC and I try to keep myself from asking bad or 'obvious' questions to
that helpful crowd  ; )

I've since moved on to looking at using a collection of libraries like
hiccup/domina/dommy/whatever for DOM stuff (I don't care - they would all
work for my needs) and - *crucially* - using core.async as the glue that
will facilitate the interactions between all the pieces of the UI stuff.  I
have renewed excitement for the project that I'm working on because I'm no
longer stuck in slow motion.  Again, I only essentially have hobby time
to work on this but in one week of learning core.async, with special thanks
to David Nolen's tutorials and example code, I know how to proceed.  I'll
have to write some additional stuff that pedestal-app would have provided
out of the gate but it's nothing daunting.  And it's exciting.

Pedestal-app was too cumbersome for me, overly complicated and/or not the
kind of documentation I wanted but there's still a lot of great ideas
behind it.  I'm interested to see what pedestal-app's rate of adoption and
new developments will be, too, and it might be something I would return to
in the future.




On Fri, Nov 8, 2013 at 4:39 PM, Andreas Liljeqvist bon...@gmail.com wrote:

 Will there by any presentation on Pedestal, or just announcements?


 On Fri, Nov 8, 2013 at 1:38 AM, Ryan Neufeld r...@thinkrelevance.comwrote:

 Speaking as a core Pedestal team member and engineer at Cognitect I can
 say we are *very* serious about continuing to grow and support Pedestal.
 It may be quiet, but we're using the entirety of Pedestal with a number of
 client and are fervently preparing a number of new features and
 improvements we plan to announce at the Conj next week. Further, we've even
 begun selling commercial support that includes Pedestal[1].

 ClojureScript One was a huge influence on pedestal-app, but you're
 completely right that we've abandoned it and should probably wind things
 down there.

 Are there any other questions I can field while I'm here?

 -Ryan

 [1]: http://cognitect.com/Cognitect-Support-Services.pdf


 On Thursday, November 7, 2013 5:30:59 PM UTC-5, Marko Kocić wrote:

 Hi all,

 I'd like to hear opinions about Pedestal from the people that have been
 playing more with it. Right now I started looking at it, and like some of
 the things, but not sure should I invest more time learning it. While I do
 like some concepts, I'm not sure is it going to became abandonware like
 Clojurescript One (does anyone reemembers it anymore).

 So far, after initial splash, I haven't seen large community interest in
 it. The number of aproachable getting started guides and hands 

Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-08 Thread kovas boguta
On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 5:30 PM, Marko Kocić ma...@euptera.com wrote:

 related with Pedestal. How serious Cognitect/Relevance is about it?

There is a ton of activity in the repo. Looking forward to v3.

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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-07 Thread Andreas Liljeqvist
I sure hope it does.

Not a master of it yet, but the concept seems very interesting.
I know that there is a guy writing a book about it.

Many of the other somewhat related technologies like Django are a
completely different cognitive model.
More tutorials would be great, also they should stress the importance of
understanding the model.
Its kind of glossed over in the tutorial.


On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 11:30 PM, Marko Kocić ma...@euptera.com wrote:

 Hi all,

 I'd like to hear opinions about Pedestal from the people that have been
 playing more with it. Right now I started looking at it, and like some of
 the things, but not sure should I invest more time learning it. While I do
 like some concepts, I'm not sure is it going to became abandonware like
 Clojurescript One (does anyone reemembers it anymore).

 So far, after initial splash, I haven't seen large community interest in
 it. The number of aproachable getting started guides and hands on tutorials
 is missing. That might change over time, but I'm afraid that next year this
 time we'll get another Clojurescript one page application framework not
 much related with Pedestal. How serious Cognitect/Relevance is about it?

 Best regards,
 Marko

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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-07 Thread Marcus Blankenship
It seems like Congitect is heavily invested in it’s future, and committed to 
moving it forward.  I suspect it will change significantly as adoption 
increases, but that will probably be a good thing.

Clojure is still so new that it’s hard to know if there will be “one web 
framework to rule them all”, IMHO.

I suggest investing yourself into it.  It can’t hurt, and will make you a 
better cl/cljs dev if nothing else.


On Nov 7, 2013, at 3:12 PM, Andreas Liljeqvist bon...@gmail.com wrote:

 I sure hope it does.
 
 Not a master of it yet, but the concept seems very interesting.
 I know that there is a guy writing a book about it.
 
 Many of the other somewhat related technologies like Django are a completely 
 different cognitive model.
 More tutorials would be great, also they should stress the importance of 
 understanding the model.
 Its kind of glossed over in the tutorial.
 
 
 On Thu, Nov 7, 2013 at 11:30 PM, Marko Kocić ma...@euptera.com wrote:
 Hi all,
 
 I'd like to hear opinions about Pedestal from the people that have been 
 playing more with it. Right now I started looking at it, and like some of the 
 things, but not sure should I invest more time learning it. While I do like 
 some concepts, I'm not sure is it going to became abandonware like 
 Clojurescript One (does anyone reemembers it anymore).
 
 So far, after initial splash, I haven't seen large community interest in it. 
 The number of aproachable getting started guides and hands on tutorials is 
 missing. That might change over time, but I'm afraid that next year this time 
 we'll get another Clojurescript one page application framework not much 
 related with Pedestal. How serious Cognitect/Relevance is about it?
 
 Best regards,
 Marko
 
 
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marcus blankenship
\\\ Partner, Problem Solver, Linear Thinker
\\\ 541.805.2736 \ @justzeros \ skype:marcuscreo

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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-07 Thread Ryan Neufeld
Speaking as a core Pedestal team member and engineer at Cognitect I can say 
we are *very* serious about continuing to grow and support Pedestal. It may 
be quiet, but we're using the entirety of Pedestal with a number of client 
and are fervently preparing a number of new features and improvements we 
plan to announce at the Conj next week. Further, we've even begun selling 
commercial support that includes Pedestal[1].

ClojureScript One was a huge influence on pedestal-app, but you're 
completely right that we've abandoned it and should probably wind things 
down there.

Are there any other questions I can field while I'm here?

-Ryan

[1]: http://cognitect.com/Cognitect-Support-Services.pdf

On Thursday, November 7, 2013 5:30:59 PM UTC-5, Marko Kocić wrote:

 Hi all,

 I'd like to hear opinions about Pedestal from the people that have been 
 playing more with it. Right now I started looking at it, and like some of 
 the things, but not sure should I invest more time learning it. While I do 
 like some concepts, I'm not sure is it going to became abandonware like 
 Clojurescript One (does anyone reemembers it anymore).

 So far, after initial splash, I haven't seen large community interest in 
 it. The number of aproachable getting started guides and hands on tutorials 
 is missing. That might change over time, but I'm afraid that next year this 
 time we'll get another Clojurescript one page application framework not 
 much related with Pedestal. How serious Cognitect/Relevance is about it?

 Best regards,
 Marko



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Re: Does Pedestal have a future in the long run

2013-11-07 Thread Daniel
I suspect Pedestal adoption will really take off once it has a well designed 
and advertised widget/ui toolkit.  Just my two cents.

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