The ClojureScript coding environment for beginners.
(Part editor, part curriculum. A collaborative work by @daveliepmann, @jackrusher, and @mhuebert.)
Our work is not to teach, but to help the absorbent mind in its work of development. –Maria Montessori
A recurring problem newcomers have with Clojure is that one must learn everything at once: the JVM, and stack traces, and a new editor, and functional programming, and and and.... What if we shielded folks new to Clojure from the complexity of tooling, stack traces, and programming language esoterica? What if we got out of their way and let them feel the power of programming for themselves? This project aims to delay or remove as many of these obstacles as possible so that people can explore.
The Maria editor is a code playground. There is no installation, zero configuration, and explaining how to make it work takes approximately one sentence. Clojure's sharp edges are rounded off, for instance, by wrapping stack traces so errors are presented humanely. A handful of helper functions do the same for types and SVG shapes. We use in-place evaluation because we find it the most effective and humane way to interact with a computer.
The curriculum we use alongside the editor uses progressive disclosure of the language, to prevent overwhelming folks. Instead of explaining all Clojure's many features as a functional, hosted lisp--which is a big topic--we introduce folks to programming and let language features follow. In this spirit, we named the project after pedagogical pioneer Maria Montessori, whose method "stresses the development of a [learner's] own initiative and natural abilities, especially through practical play" and "at their own pace".
So...please go to maria.cloud and play around with it live! :)
We welcome your effort to make the beginner's path to Clojure smoother. Here's how:
The most helpful thing you can do is simply play around! 😸 and report bugs as GitHub issues.
While you play around, please send us any un-wrapped Clojure error you find. We track these in the Error Handling wiki. This is so helpful for making errors easier for new people!
Please edit the wiki directly to add your experience. Or, file a GitHub issue explaining what you were doing and what error came up. Our goal with this is to protect users from jargon-filled error messages, and that requires lots of eyes pointing out all the ways a particular error could cause trouble.
Like Clojure itself, the Maria curriculum is open-source, but is not primarily a community effort. We've chosen a particular approach and we write with a particular voice for a particular audience. Therefore other approaches, although valid, may not belong here. With that caveat, those of us who write the curriculum are open to contributions, which have been accepted according to these rough guidelines:
for more substantial contributions, from suggestions for phrasing up to entirely new modules, we ask that you do the following to be on the same page as us:
With that shared understanding attained, please get in touch with us by email so we can discuss ideas in depth.
First, copy to your local machine and navigate to the editor
directory:
git clone https://github.com/mhuebert/maria.git;
cd maria/editor
Now, within the editor
directory, install javascript dependencies and compile stylesheets:
yarn;
yarn watch;
When these builds have completed, open your web browser to https://localhost:8701 (note that dev servers are run via https)
The default nrepl
port, configured in shadow-cljs.edn
, is 7888
.
Once connected, the following will print out a list of things you can do:
(require '[shadow.cljs.devtools.api :as shadow])
(shadow/help)
to directly enter the live
environment (provided you've opened up your browser):
(shadow.cljs.devtools.api/repl :live)
yarn release;
The curriculum is licensed as Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0).
The Shapes and Friendly libraries are distributed under the Eclipse Public License 2.0.
See LICENSE files in relevant subdirectories.