◊(Local Yarn Code "Check-in [82481872]")

Overview
Comment:Further reorg code docs
Timelines: family | ancestors | descendants | both | doc-expansion
Files: files | file ages | folders
SHA3-256: 824818725a97c2ee070f686f7a75733c253da09b75d2cda3582d6094cb326f63
User & Date: joel on 2020-02-19 03:28:36
Other Links: branch diff | manifest | tags
Context
2020-02-19
07:24
Add listing schema to code docs Closed-Leaf check-in: b4faafb8 user: joel tags: doc-expansion
03:28
Further reorg code docs check-in: 82481872 user: joel tags: doc-expansion
2020-02-14
22:46
Clean up HTML Snippets scribble doc check-in: e2a5ab96 user: joel tags: doc-expansion
Changes

Modified code-docs/cache.scrbl from [aa0f66e5] to [2e144f88].

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@defstruct*[cache:series ([id            id/f]
                          [page          symbol/f]
                          [title         string/f]
                          [published     string/f]
                          [noun-plural   string/f]
                          [noun-singular string/f])
                         #:constructor-name make-cache:series]{
Table holding cached-information on series.
}
















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@defstruct*[cache:series ([id            id/f]
                          [page          symbol/f]
                          [title         string/f]
                          [published     string/f]
                          [noun-plural   string/f]
                          [noun-singular string/f])
                         #:constructor-name make-cache:series]{
Table holding cached information on series.
}

@defstruct*[cache:index-entry ([id id/f]
                               [entry       string/f]
                               [subentry    string/f]
                               [page        symbol/f]
                               [html-anchor string/f])
                              #:constructor-name make-cache:index-entry]{
Table holding cached information about index entries found in articles.
}

Modified code-docs/crystalize.scrbl from [af1f96a5] to [4df88301].

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#lang scribble/manual

@; SPDX-License-Identifier: BlueOak-1.0.0
@; This file is licensed under the Blue Oak Model License 1.0.0.

@(require "scribble-helpers.rkt")

@(require (for-label "../pollen.rkt"
                     "../dust.rkt"
                     "../crystalize.rkt"

                     racket/base
                     racket/contract
                     racket/string
                     txexpr
                     pollen/pagetree))

@title{@filepath{crystalize.rkt}}

@defmodule["crystalize.rkt" #:packages ()]

“Crystalizing” is an extra layer in between docs and templates that destructures the doc and stores
it in various pieces in a SQLite cache. Individual articles save chunks of rendered HTML to the
cache when their individual pages are rendered. When pulling together listings of articles in
different contexts that need to be filtered and sorted, a SQL query is much faster than trolling
through the Pollen cache for matching docs and regenerating the HTML.




@defproc[(parse-and-cache-article! [pagenode pagenode?] [doc txexpr?]) non-empty-string?]

Returns a string containing the HTML of @racket[_doc]. @margin-note{This is one function that breaks
my convention of using a prefix of @tt{html$-} for functions that return a single string of HTML.}

Privately, it does a lot of other work. The article is analyzed, additional metadata is constructed,
and it is saved to the SQLite cache. If the article specifies a @racket['series] meta, information
about that series is fetched and used in the rendering of the article. If there are @racket[note]s
in the doc, they are parsed and saved individually to the SQLite cache. If any of the notes use the

@code{#:disposition} attribute, information about the disposition is parsed out and used in the
rendering of the article.

















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#lang scribble/manual

@; SPDX-License-Identifier: BlueOak-1.0.0
@; This file is licensed under the Blue Oak Model License 1.0.0.

@(require "scribble-helpers.rkt")

@(require (for-label "../pollen.rkt"

                     "../crystalize.rkt"
                     "../cache.rkt"
                     racket/base
                     racket/contract
                     racket/string
                     txexpr
                     pollen/pagetree))

@title[#:tag "crystalize-rkt"]{Crystalize}

@defmodule["crystalize.rkt" #:packages ()]

“Crystalizing” is an extra layer in between docs and templates that destructures the @tt{doc} and
stores it in various pieces in a SQLite cache. Individual articles save chunks of rendered HTML to
the cache when their individual pages are rendered. When pulling together listings of articles in
different contexts that need to be filtered and sorted, a SQL query is much faster than trolling
through the Pollen cache for matching docs and regenerating the HTML.

@margin-note{These functions are designed to be used within the template for articles and series,
respectively, so that the cache is updated precisely when the web page is rendered.}

@defproc[(parse-and-cache-article! [pagenode pagenode?] [doc txexpr?]) non-empty-string?]{

Returns a string containing the HTML of @racket[_doc]. 


Privately, it does a lot of other work. The article is analyzed, additional metadata is constructed
and saved to the SQLite cache and saved using @racket[make-cache:article]. If the article specifies
a @racket['series] meta, information about that series is fetched and used in the rendering of the
article. If there are @racket[note]s or @racket[index] tags in the doc, they are parsed and saved
individually to the SQLite cache (using @racket[make-cache:note] and @racket[make-cache:index-entry]
respectively). If any of the notes use the @code{#:disposition} attribute, information about the
disposition is parsed out and used in the rendering of the article.
}

@defproc[(cache-series!) void?]{

Attempts to look up certain values in @racket[current-metas] which we expect to be defined on
a typical series page, and saves them to the cache using @racket[make-cache:series]. If @tt{title}
is not defined in the current metas, you’ll get an error. If any of the others are missing, an empty
string is used.
}

Modified code-docs/design.scrbl from [7f7e48a9] to [85920e85].

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#lang scribble/manual

@; SPDX-License-Identifier: BlueOak-1.0.0
@; This file is licensed under the Blue Oak Model License 1.0.0.

@(require "scribble-helpers.rkt"
          racket/runtime-path)

@(require (for-label racket/base))


@title{Design Background}


The design and implementation of @italic{The Local Yarn} are guided by requirements that have
evolved since I started the site in 1999. I enumerate them here because they explain why the code is
necessarily more complicated than a typical blog.

@itemlist[
  @item{@bold{The writing will publish to two places from the same source: the web server, and the
  bookshelf.} The web server, because it’s a fun, fast way to publish writing and code to the whole
  world (you knew that already); but also on bookshelves, because
  @ext-link["https://thelocalyarn.com/excursus/secretary/posts/web-books.html"]{a web server is like
  a projector}, and I want to be able to turn it off someday and still have something to show for
  all my work. Plus, I just like printed books.}

  @item{@bold{Changes are part of the content.} I like to revisit, resurface and amend things I’ve
  written before. Views change, new ideas come along. In a typical blog the focus is always at
  whatever’s happening at the head of the time stream; an addendum to an older post is, for all
  practical purposes, invisible and nearly useless. I want every published edit to an article to be
  findable and linkable. I want addenda to be extremely visible. These addenda should also be able
  to mark major shifts in the author’s own perspective on what they originally wrote.}






  @item{@bold{Everything produced here, both in print and on the web, should look good.}
  @item{@bold{All the output should be produced (and reproducible) by automated processes.} No



  clicking on buttons in apps to publish web pages or books.}

















































]




@nested[#:style 'inset]{
















  “Yet modest ornament with use combined @(linebreak)

  Attracts the eye to exercise the mind.” @(linebreak)


  —@ext-link["https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Rogers"]{Samuel Rogers}



}






































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#lang scribble/manual

@; SPDX-License-Identifier: BlueOak-1.0.0
@; This file is licensed under the Blue Oak Model License 1.0.0.

@(require "scribble-helpers.rkt"
          (for-label "../pollen.rkt"))

@(require (for-label racket/base))

@title{Basic Notions}

@section[#:tag "design-goals"]{Design Goals}

The design of @italic{The Local Yarn} is guided by requirements that have evolved since I started
the site in 1999. I enumerate them here because they explain why the code is necessarily more
complicated than a typical blog:

@itemlist[
 @item{@bold{The writing will publish to two places from the same source: the web server, and the
 bookshelf.} The web server, because it’s a fun, fast way to publish writing and code to the whole
 world (you knew that already); but also on bookshelves, because
 @ext-link["https://thelocalyarn.com/excursus/secretary/posts/web-books.html"]{a web server is like
 a projector}, and I want to be able to turn it off someday and still have something to show for all
 my work. Plus, I just like printed books.}

 @item{@bold{Changes are part of the content.} I like to revisit, resurface and amend things I’ve
 written before. Views change, new ideas come along. In a typical blog the focus is always at
 whatever’s happening at the head of the time stream; an addendum to an older post is, for all
 practical purposes, invisible and nearly useless. I want every published edit to an article to be
 findable and linkable. I want addenda to be extremely visible. These addenda should also be able to
 mark major shifts in the author’s own perspective on what they originally wrote.}

 @item{@bold{Experimentation must be accomodated gracefully.} I should be able to write fiction,
 poetry, opinion pieces, minor observations or collections, or anything else, and have or create
 a good home for it here. Where dissimilar writings appear together, there should be signals that
 help the reader understand what they are looking at, switch contexts, and find more if they wish.}
 
 @item{@bold{Everything produced here should look good.}}

 @item{@bold{Reward exploration without disorienting the reader.}}
 
 @item{@bold{Everything produced here should be the result of an automatable process.} No clicking
 around to publish web pages and books.}
 
 ]

@section{Names for things and how they fit together}

The Local Yarn is mostly comprised of @tech{articles} (individual writings) which may contain
@tech{notes} (addenda by the author or others) and may also be grouped into @tech{series}. These are
similar to a typical blog’s @italic{posts}, @italic{comments} and @italic{categories}, but there are
important differences.

@subsection{Articles}

The @deftech{article} is the basic unit of content, like a typical blog post. In the web edition,
each article has its own @tt{.html} file; in print editions, an article may comprise either
a chapter or a part of a chapter, depending on the content.

An article can start out very small — just a date and a few sentences. Supplying a title is
optional. Later, it may grow in any of several directions: @tech{notes} can be added, or a title, or
cross-references to later articles; or it may be added to a series. Or it may just remain the way it
started.

@subsection{Notes}

A @deftech{note} is a comment or addendum to an @tech{article} using the @racket[note] tag. It may
be written by the same person who wrote the article, or submitted by a reader.

A note appears at the bottom of the article to which it is attached, but it also appears in the blog
and in the RSS feed as a separate piece of content, and is given the same visual weight as actual
articles.

A note may optionally have a @deftech{disposition} which reflects a change in attitude towards its
parent article. A disposition consists of a @italic{disposition mark} such as an asterisk or dagger,
and a past-tense verb. For example, an author may revisit an opinion piece written years earlier and
add a note describing how their opinion has changed; the tag for this note might include
@racket[#:disposition "* recanted"] as an attribute. This would cause the @tt{*} to be added to the
article’s title, and the phrase “Now considered recanted” to be added to the margin, with a link to
the note.

@subsubsection{Notes vs. blog “comments”}

Typical blog comments serve as kind of a temporary discussion spot for a few days or weeks after
a post is published. Commenting on an old post feels useless because the comment is only visible at
the bottom of its parent post, and older posts are never “bumped” back into visibility.

By contrast, notes on @italic{The Local Yarn} appear as self-contained writings at the top of the
blog and RSS feed as soon as they are published. This “resurfaces” the original article
to which they are attached. This extra visibility also makes them a good tool for the original
author to fill out or update the article. In effect, with notes, each article potentially becomes
its own miniature blog.

The flip side of this change is that what used to be the “comment section” is no longer allowed to
function as a kind of per-article chat.

@tabular[#:sep @hspace[1]
         #:style 'boxed
         #:row-properties '((bottom-border top))
         (list
          (list @bold{Typical Blog Comments} @bold{Local Yarn @emph{Notes}})
          (list "Rarely used after a post has aged"
                "Commonly used on posts many years old")
          (list "Visible only at the bottom of the parent post"
                "Included in the main stream of posts and in the RSS feed alongside actual posts")
          (list "Invites any and all feedback, from small compliments to lengthy rebuttals"
                "Readers invited to treat their responses as submissions to a publication.")
          (list "Usually used by readers"
                "Usually used by the original author")
          (list "Don’t affect the original post"
                "May have properties (e.g. disposition) that change the status and
presentation of the original post")
          (list "Moderation (if done) is typically binary: approved or not"
                "Moderation may take the form of edits and inline responses."))]

@subsection{Series}

A @deftech{series} is a grouping of @tech{articles} into a particular order under a heading.
A series may present its own written content alongside the listing of its articles.

The page for a series can choose how to display its articles: chronologically, or in an arbitrary
order. It can display articles only, or a mixed listing of articles and notes, like the blog. And it
can choose to display articles in list form, or as excerpts, or in their entirety.

A series can specify @italic{nouns} to be applied to its articles.

@subsubsection{Series vs. blog “categories”}

Typical blogs are not very good at presenting content that may vary a lot in length and style. The
kind of writing I want to experiment with may change a lot from day to day, season to season, decade
to decade. I wanted a single system that could organize and present it all, in a thoughtful,
coherent way, rather than starting a new blog every time I wanted to try writing a different kind of
thing.

My solution to this was to enrich the idea of “categories”. Rather than being simply labels that you
slap on blog posts, they would be titled collections with their own unique content and way of
presenting articles and notes. In addition, they could pass down certain properties to the posts
they contain, that can be used to give signals to the reader about what they are looking at. 

@tabular[#:sep @hspace[1]
         #:style 'boxed
         #:row-properties '((bottom-border top))
         (list
          (list @bold{Typical Blog Categories/Tags} @bold{Local Yarn @emph{Series}})
          (list "Every article needs to have one"
                "Many or most articles won’t have one")
          (list "Named with a single word" 
                "Name with a descriptive title")
          (list "Has no content or properties of its own"
                "Has its own content and properties")
          (list "Broad in scope, few in number"	
                "Narrow in scope, many in number")
          (list "Selected to be relevant for use across the entire lifetime of the site"
                "Selected without reference to future creative direction; may be closed after only
                 a few articles"))]

Modified code-docs/main.scrbl from [33fc9294] to [e2e5a12a].

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#lang scribble/manual

@; SPDX-License-Identifier: BlueOak-1.0.0
@; This file is licensed under the Blue Oak Model License 1.0.0.

@(require "scribble-helpers.rkt")




@title{Local Yarn: source code notes}

@author{Joel Dueck}

These are my notes about the internals of the Local Yarn source code. In other words, a personal
reference, rather than a tutorial. These pages concern only the source code itself. Refer to the
wiki for info about deployment, etc.

You’ll get the most out of these notes if you have read @other-doc['(lib
"pollen/scribblings/pollen.scrbl")], and worked through the tutorials by hand.

@margin-note{Note that these pages are heavily interlinked with the central Racket documentation at
@tt{docs.racket-lang.org}, which are written and maintained by others. 

If you’re browsing these docs from within @italic{The Local Yarn}’s main website, and if you follow
links to other Racket documentation, you’ll find that to @emph{other} sites on those pages will not

work (due to the  @ext-link["https://content-security-policy.com"]{content security policy} in





effect when inside a frame). To follow such links, right-click and open the link in a new tab or


window.










You may also wish to @ext-link["#"]{open this page in its own tab.}}




@local-table-of-contents[]

@include-section["tour.scrbl"]
@include-section["overview.scrbl"]
@include-section["pollen.scrbl"]  @; pollen.rkt
@include-section["dust.scrbl"]    @; dust.rkt
@include-section["snippets-html.scrbl"] @; you get the idea
@include-section["cache.scrbl"]
@include-section["crystalize.scrbl"]






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#lang scribble/manual

@; SPDX-License-Identifier: BlueOak-1.0.0
@; This file is licensed under the Blue Oak Model License 1.0.0.

@(require "scribble-helpers.rkt"
          racket/runtime-path
          (for-label racket/base
                     "../crystalize.rkt"))

@title{Local Yarn: source code notes}

@author{Joel Dueck}

These are my notes about the internals of the Local Yarn source code. In other words, a personal
reference, rather than a tutorial. These pages concern only the source code itself. Refer to the
wiki for info about deployment, etc.

You’ll get the most out of these notes if you have read @other-doc['(lib
"pollen/scribblings/pollen.scrbl")], and worked through the tutorials by hand.

@margin-note{Note that these pages are heavily interlinked with the central Racket documentation at
@tt{docs.racket-lang.org}, which are written and maintained by others. 


Some links from those pages will not work unless you @ext-link["#"]{open this page in its own tab}.
}

Here’s a rough diagram showing how the @tt{.rkt} modules in this project relate to each other, and
to the Pollen source documents. This is the least complex system I could devise that would @tt{A)}
implement everything I want in my @secref["design-goals"], @tt{B)} cleanly separate dependencies for
print and web output, and @tt{C)} organize an ever-growing collection of hundreds of individual
notes and articles without noticable loss of speed. 

@(define-runtime-path source-diagram "source-diagram.png")
@centered{@responsive-retina-image[source-diagram]}

The solid-line connections indicate explicit @racket[require] relationships. Dotted arrows generally
indicate implicit exports in the Pollen environment: docs and metas to templates,
@seclink["pollen-rkt"]{@filepath{pollen.rkt}} to source documents and templates. The orange lines
highlight the provision and use of the functions in
@seclink["crystalize-rkt"]{@filepath{crystalize.rkt}}.

Individual articles, while they are being rendered to HTML pages, save copies of their metadata and
HTML to the SQLite cache. This is done by calling @racket[parse-and-cache-article!] from within
their template. Likewise, series pages cache themselves with a call to @racket[cache-series!] from
within their template.

Any pages that gather content from multiple articles, such as Series pages and the RSS feed, pull
this content directly from the SQLite cache. This is much faster than trawling through Pollen’s
cached metas of every article looking for matching articles.

@local-table-of-contents[]

@include-section["tour.scrbl"]
@include-section["design.scrbl"]
@include-section["pollen.scrbl"]  @; pollen.rkt
@include-section["dust.scrbl"]    @; dust.rkt
@include-section["snippets-html.scrbl"] @; you get the idea
@include-section["cache.scrbl"]
@include-section["crystalize.scrbl"]

Deleted code-docs/overview.scrbl version [1a4508f5].

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#lang scribble/manual

@; SPDX-License-Identifier: BlueOak-1.0.0
@; This file is licensed under the Blue Oak Model License 1.0.0.

@(require "scribble-helpers.rkt"
          racket/runtime-path)

@(require (for-label racket/base))

@title{Overview}

@section{Source Code}

Here’s a rough diagram showing how the @tt{.rkt} modules in this project relate to each other, and
to the Pollen source documents.

@(define-runtime-path source-diagram "source-diagram.png")
@centered{@responsive-retina-image[source-diagram]}

The solid-line connections indicate explicit @racket[require] relationships. Dotted arrows generally
indicate implicit exports in the Pollen environment: docs and metas to templates,
@filepath{pollen.rkt} to source documents and templates. The orange lines highlight the provision
and use of the functions in @filepath{crystalize.rkt}.

Individual articles, while they are being rendered to HTML pages, save copies of their metadata and
HTML to the SQLite cache. This is done by calling functions in @filepath{crystalize.rkt} from within
the template.

Any pages that gather content from multiple articles, such as Series pages and the RSS feed, pull
this content directly from the SQLite cache. This is much faster than trawling through Pollen’s
cached metas of every article looking for matching articles.

This is the least complex system I could devise that can @tt{A)} implement everything I want in my
@wiki{Design and Layout}, @tt{B)} cleanly separate dependencies for print and web output, and
@tt{C)} organize an ever-growing collection of hundreds of individual notes and articles without
noticable loss of speed. 
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Modified code-docs/pollen.scrbl from [ecc33834] to [3b0baad7].

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#lang scribble/manual

@; SPDX-License-Identifier: BlueOak-1.0.0
@; This file is licensed under the Blue Oak Model License 1.0.0.

@(require "scribble-helpers.rkt")
@(require (for-label "../pollen.rkt"
                     "../dust.rkt"

                     "../crystalize.rkt"
                     racket/base
                     racket/contract
                     racket/string
                     txexpr
                     pollen/tag
                     pollen/setup
                     pollen/core
                     sugar/coerce))

@title[#:tag "pollen-rkt"]{Pollen}

@defmodule["pollen.rkt" #:packages ()]

The file @filepath{pollen.rkt} is implicitly @code{require}d in every template and every @code{#lang
pollen} file in the project. It defines the markup for all Pollen documents, and also re-provides

everything provided by @filepath{cache.rkt} and @filepath{crystalize.rkt}.

The @code{setup} module towards the top of the file is used as described in
@racketmodname[pollen/setup].

@section{Markup reference}

These are the tags that can be used in any of @italic{The Local Yarn}’s Pollen documents (articles,
etc).

@defproc[(title [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]

@margin-note{The @code{title} function is not actually defined in @filepath{pollen.rkt} or anywhere
else. In Pollen, any undefined function @tt{title} defaults to @racket[(default-tag-function
title)], which is what I want. It is documented here because its presence or absence has
side-effects on the display of the article.}

Supplies a title for the document. You can use any otherwise-valid markup within the title tag. 

Titles are optional; if you don’t specify a title, the article will appear without one. This is
a feature!


@defproc[(p [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]

Wrap text in a paragraph. You almost never need to use this tag explicitly; 
just separate paragraphs by an empty line.

Single newlines within a paragraph will be replaced by spaces, allowing you to use
@ext-link["https://scott.mn/2014/02/21/semantic_linewrapping/"]{semantic line wrapping}.


@defproc[(newthought [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]

An inline style intended for the first few words of the first paragraph in a new section. Applies
a “small caps” style to the text. Any paragraph containing a @code{newthought} tag is given extra
vertical leading.

Rule of thumb: within an article, use either @code{section}/@code{subsection} or @code{newthought}
to separate sections of text, but not both. Even better, keep it consistent across articles within
a series.

If you just need small caps without affecting the paragraph, use @code{smallcaps}.


@deftogether[(@defproc[(section    [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(subsection [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?])]

Create second- and third-level headings, respectively. This is counting the article's title as the
first-level header (even if the current article has no title).



@defproc[(block [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]

A container for content that should appear grouped together on larger displays. Intended for use in
Series pages, where the template is very minimal. You would want output from
@racket[listing<>-short/articles] to appear inside a @racket[block], but you would want output from
@racket[listing<>-full/articles] to appear outside it (since each article effectively supplies its own
block). Only relevant to HTML output.



@deftogether[(@defproc[(link [link-id stringish?] [link-text xexpr?]) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(url  [link-id stringish?] [url string?]) void?])]

All hyperlinks are specified reference-style. So, to link some text, use the @code{link} tag with
an identifier, which can be a string, symbol or number. Elsewhere in the text, use @code{url} with
the same identifier to specify the URL:

@codeblock|{
  #lang pollen
  If you need help, ◊link[1]{Google it}.

  ◊url[1]{https://google.com}
}|

The @code{url} tag for a given identifier may be placed anywhere in the document, even before it is
referenced. If you create a @code{link} for an identifier that has no corresponding @code{url},
a @code{"Missing reference: [link-id]"} message will be substituted for the URL. Conversely, 
creating a @code{url} that is never referenced will produce no output and no warnings or errors.



@deftogether[(@defproc[(figure     [image-file string?] [caption xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(figure-@2x [image-file string?] [caption xexpr?] ...) txexpr?])]

Insert a block-level image. The @racket[_image-file] should be supplied as a filename only, with no
folder names. It is assumed that the image is located inside an @racket[images-folder] within the
same folder as the source document.

For web output, using @racket[figure-@2x] will produce an image hard-coded to display at half its
actual size, or the width of the text block, whichever is smaller.



@defproc[(image-link [image-file string?] [link-text xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]

Adds a hyperlink to @racket[_image-file], supplied as a filename only with no folder names. It is
assumed that the image is located inside an @racket[images-folder] within the same folder as the
source document.



@deftogether[(@defproc[(fn    [fn-id stringish?]) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(fndef [fn-id stringish?] [elements xexpr?] ...) txexpr?])]

As with hyperlinks, footnotes are specified reference-style. In the output, footnotes will be
numbered according to the order in which their identifiers are referenced in the source document.

Example:

@codeblock|{
  #lang pollen
  Shoeless Joe Jackson was one of the best players of all time◊fn[1].

  ◊fndef[1]{But he might have lost the 1919 World Series on purpose.}
}|

You can refer to a given footnote definition more than once.

The @code{fndef} for a given id may be placed anywhere in the source document, even before it is
referenced. If you create a @code{fn} reference without a corresponding @code{fndef},
a @code{"Missing footnote definition!"} message will be substituted for the footnote text.
Conversely, creating a @code{fndef} that is never referenced will produce no output, warning or
error.



@deftogether[(@defproc[(dialogue [elements xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(say [interlocutor string?] [elements xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(saylines [interlocutor string?] [elements xexpr?] ...) txexpr?])]

Use these tags together for transcripts of dialogue, chats, screenplays, interviews and so
forth. The @racket[saylines] tag is the same as @racket[say] except that within @racket[saylines],
linebreaks within paragraphs are preserved.

Example usage:

@codeblock|{
  #lang pollen

  ◊dialogue{
    ◊say["Tavi"]{You also write fiction, or you used to. Do you still?}
    ◊say["Lorde"]{The thing is, when I write now, it comes out as songs.}
  }
}|



@defproc[(index [#:key key string? ""] [elements xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]

Creates a bidirectional link between this spot in the document and an entry in the keyword index
under @racket[_key]. If @racket[_key] is not supplied, the string contents of @racket[_elements] are
used as the key.

The example below will create two index entries, one under the heading “compassion” and one under
the heading “cats”:

@codeblock|{
  #lang pollen

  “I have a theory which I suspect is rather immoral,” Smiley 
  went on, more lightly. “Each of us has only a quantum of 
  ◊index{compassion}. That if we lavish our concern on every
  stray ◊index[#:key "cats"]{cat} we never get to the centre of 
  things. What do you think of it?” 
}|



@defproc[(note [#:date date-str non-empty-string?]
               [#:author author string? ""]
               [#:author-url author-url string? ""]
               [#:disposition disp-str string? ""]) txexpr?]

Add a note to the “Further Notes” section of the article. Notes are like blog comments but are
more rare and powerful; see @wiki{Differences from blogs}.

The @code{#:date} attribute is required and must be of the form @tt{YYYY-MM-DD}.

The @code{#:author} and @code{#:author-url} attributes can be used to credit notes from other
people. If the @code{#:author} attribute is not supplied then the value of @code{default-authorname}
is used.









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#lang scribble/manual

@; SPDX-License-Identifier: BlueOak-1.0.0
@; This file is licensed under the Blue Oak Model License 1.0.0.

@(require "scribble-helpers.rkt")
@(require (for-label "../pollen.rkt"
                     "../dust.rkt"
                     "../cache.rkt"
                     "../crystalize.rkt"
                     racket/base
                     racket/contract
                     racket/string
                     txexpr
                     pollen/tag
                     pollen/setup
                     pollen/core
                     sugar/coerce))

@title[#:tag "pollen-rkt"]{Pollen}

@defmodule["pollen.rkt" #:packages ()]

The file @filepath{pollen.rkt} is implicitly @code{require}d in every template and every @code{#lang
pollen} file in the project. It defines the markup for all Pollen documents, and also re-provides
everything provided by @seclink["cache-rkt"]{@filepath{cache.rkt}} and
@seclink["crystalize-rkt"]{@filepath{crystalize.rkt}}.

The @code{setup} module towards the top of the file is used as described in
@racketmodname[pollen/setup].

@section{Markup reference}

These are the tags that can be used in any of @italic{The Local Yarn}’s Pollen documents (articles,
etc).

@defproc[(title [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]{

@margin-note{The @code{title} function is not actually defined in @filepath{pollen.rkt} or anywhere
else. In Pollen, any undefined function @tt{title} defaults to @racket[(default-tag-function
title)], which is what I want. It is documented here because its presence or absence has
side-effects on the display of the article.}

Supplies a title for the document. You can use any otherwise-valid markup within the title tag. 

Titles are optional; if you don’t specify a title, the article will appear without one. This is
a feature!
}

@defproc[(p [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]{

Wrap text in a paragraph. You almost never need to use this tag explicitly; 
just separate paragraphs by an empty line.

Single newlines within a paragraph will be replaced by spaces, allowing you to use
@ext-link["https://scott.mn/2014/02/21/semantic_linewrapping/"]{semantic line wrapping}.
}

@defproc[(newthought [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]{

An inline style intended for the first few words of the first paragraph in a new section. Applies
a “small caps” style to the text. Any paragraph containing a @code{newthought} tag is given extra
vertical leading.

Rule of thumb: within an article, use either @code{section}/@code{subsection} or @code{newthought}
to separate sections of text, but not both. Even better, keep it consistent across articles within
a series.

If you just need small caps without affecting the paragraph, use @racket[caps].
}

@deftogether[(@defproc[(section    [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(subsection [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?])]{

Create second- and third-level headings, respectively. This is counting the article's title as the
first-level header (even if the current article has no title).

}

@defproc[(block [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]{

A container for content that should appear grouped together on larger displays. Intended for use in
Series pages, where the template is very minimal to allow for more customization. You would want
output from @racket[<listing-short>] to appear inside a @racket[block], but you would want output
from @racket[<listing-full>] to appear outside it (since each article effectively supplies its own
block). Only relevant to HTML output.

}

@deftogether[(@defproc[(link [link-id stringish?] [link-text xexpr?]) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(url  [link-id stringish?] [url string?]) void?])]{

All hyperlinks are specified reference-style. So, to link some text, use the @code{link} tag with
an identifier, which can be a string, symbol or number. Elsewhere in the text, use @code{url} with
the same identifier to specify the URL:

@codeblock|{
  #lang pollen
  If you need help, ◊link[1]{Google it}.

  ◊url[1]{https://google.com}
}|

The @code{url} tag for a given identifier may be placed anywhere in the document, even before it is
referenced. If you create a @code{link} for an identifier that has no corresponding @code{url},
a @code{"Missing reference: [link-id]"} message will be substituted for the URL. Conversely, 
creating a @code{url} that is never referenced will produce no output and no warnings or errors.

}

@deftogether[(@defproc[(figure     [image-file string?] [caption xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(figure-@2x [image-file string?] [caption xexpr?] ...) txexpr?])]{

Insert a block-level image. The @racket[_image-file] should be supplied as a filename only, with no
folder names. It is assumed that the image is located inside an @racket[images-folder] within the
same folder as the source document.

For web output, using @racket[figure-@2x] will produce an image hard-coded to display at half its
actual size, or the width of the text block, whichever is smaller.

}

@defproc[(image-link [image-file string?] [link-text xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]{

Adds a hyperlink to @racket[_image-file], supplied as a filename only with no folder names. It is
assumed that the image is located inside an @racket[images-folder] within the same folder as the
source document.

}

@deftogether[(@defproc[(fn    [fn-id stringish?]) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(fndef [fn-id stringish?] [elements xexpr?] ...) txexpr?])]{

As with hyperlinks, footnotes are specified reference-style. In the output, footnotes will be
numbered according to the order in which their identifiers are referenced in the source document.

Example:

@codeblock|{
  #lang pollen
  Shoeless Joe Jackson was one of the best players of all time◊fn[1].

  ◊fndef[1]{But he might have lost the 1919 World Series on purpose.}
}|

You can refer to a given footnote definition more than once.

The @code{fndef} for a given id may be placed anywhere in the source document, even before it is
referenced. If you create a @code{fn} reference without a corresponding @code{fndef},
a @code{"Missing footnote definition!"} message will be substituted for the footnote text.
Conversely, creating a @code{fndef} that is never referenced will produce no output, warning or
error.

}

@deftogether[(@defproc[(dialogue [elements xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(say [interlocutor string?] [elements xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(saylines [interlocutor string?] [elements xexpr?] ...) txexpr?])]{

Use these tags together for transcripts of dialogue, chats, screenplays, interviews and so
forth. The @racket[saylines] tag is the same as @racket[say] except that within @racket[saylines],
linebreaks within paragraphs are preserved.

Example usage:

@codeblock|{
  #lang pollen

  ◊dialogue{
    ◊say["Tavi"]{You also write fiction, or you used to. Do you still?}
    ◊say["Lorde"]{The thing is, when I write now, it comes out as songs.}
  }
}|

}

@defproc[(index [#:key key string? ""] [elements xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]{

Creates a bidirectional link between this spot in the document and an entry in the keyword index
under @racket[_key]. If @racket[_key] is not supplied, the string contents of @racket[_elements] are
used as the key. Use @tt{!} to split @racket[_key] into a main entry and a subentry.

The example below will create two index entries, one under the heading “compassion” and one under
the main heading "cats" and a subheading “stray”:

@codeblock|{
  #lang pollen

  “I have a theory which I suspect is rather immoral,” Smiley 
  went on, more lightly. “Each of us has only a quantum of 
  ◊index{compassion}. That if we lavish our concern on every
  stray ◊index[#:key "cats!stray"]{cat} we never get to the
  centre of things. What do you think of it?” 
}|

}

@defproc[(note [#:date date-str non-empty-string?]
               [#:author author string? ""]
               [#:author-url author-url string? ""]
               [#:disposition disp-str string? ""]) txexpr?]{

Add a @tech{note} to the “Further Notes” section of the article. 


The @code{#:date} attribute is required and must be of the form @tt{YYYY-MM-DD}.

The @code{#:author} and @code{#:author-url} attributes can be used to credit notes from other
people. If the @code{#:author} attribute is not supplied then the value of @code{default-authorname}
is used.

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Some caveats (for now):

@itemlist[
  @item{Avoid defining new footnotes using @code{fndef} inside a @code{note}; these footnotes will
  be placed into the main footnote section of the article, which is probably not what you want.}
]



@defproc[(verse [#:title title string? ""] [#:italic? italic boolean? #f] [element xexpr?] ...)
         txexpr?]

Typeset contents as poetry, with line breaks preserved and the block centered on the longest line.
To set the whole block in italic, use @code{#:italic? #t} — otherwise, use @code{i} within the
block.






@defproc[(blockquote [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]

Surrounds a block quotation. To cite a source, include a @code{footer} tag at the bottom.



@defproc[(blockcode [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]

Typeset contents as a block of code using a monospace font. Line breaks are preserved.



@deftogether[(@defproc[(i      [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(em     [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(b      [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(strong [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(strike [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(ol     [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(ul     [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(item   [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(sup    [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(caps   [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(code   [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?])]

Work pretty much how you’d expect.



@section{Convenience macros}

@defform[(for/s thing-id listofthings result-exprs ...)
         #:contracts ([listofthings (listof any/c)])]

A shorthand form for Pollen’s @code{for/splice} that uses far fewer brackets when you’re only
iterating through a single list.

@codeblock|{
#lang pollen

◊for/s[x '(7 8 9)]{Now once for number ◊x}

◊;Above line is shorthand for this one:
◊for/splice[[(x (in-list '(7 8 9)))]]{Now once for number ◊x}
}|



@section{Defining new tags}

I use a couple of macros to define tag functions that automatically branch into other functions
depending on the current output target format. This allows me to put the format-specific tag
functions in separate files that have separate places in the dependency chain. So if only the HTML
tag functions have changed and not those for PDF, the @filepath{makefile} can ensure only the HTML files are
rebuilt.

@defproc[#:kind "syntax"
 (poly-branch-tag (tag-id symbol?))
 (-> txexpr?)]

Defines a new function @racket[_tag-id] which will automatically pass all of its arguments to a
function whose name is the value returned by @racket[current-poly-target], followed by a hyphen,
followed by @racket[_tag]. So whenever the current output format is @racket['html], the function
defined by @racket[(poly-branch-tag _p)] will branch to a function named @racket[html-p]; when the
current format is @racket['pdf], it will branch to @racket[pdf-p], and so forth.

You @emph{must} define these branch functions separately, and you must define one for @emph{every}
output format included in the definition of @racket[poly-targets] in this file’s @racket[setup]
submodule. If you do not, you will get “unbound identifier” errors at expansion time.

The convention in this project is to define and provide these branch functions in separate files:
see, e.g., @filepath{tags-html.rkt}.

Functions defined with this macro @emph{do not} accept keyword arguments. If you need keyword
arguments, see @racket[poly-branch-kwargs-tag].

@margin-note{The thought behind having two macros so similar is that, by cutting out handling for keyword
arguments, @racket[poly-branch-tag] could produce simpler and faster code. I have not verified if
this intuition is meaningful or correct.}



@defproc[#:kind "syntax"
         (poly-branch-kwargs-tag (tag-id symbol?))
         (-> txexpr?)]

Works just like @racket[poly-branch-tag], but uses Pollen’s @racket[define-tag-function] so that
keyword arguments will automatically be parsed as X-expression attributes.

Additionally, the branch functions called from the new function must accept exactly two arguments:
a list of attributes and a list of elements.










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Some caveats (for now):

@itemlist[
  @item{Avoid defining new footnotes using @code{fndef} inside a @code{note}; these footnotes will
  be placed into the main footnote section of the article, which is probably not what you want.}
]

}

@defproc[(verse [#:title title string? ""] [#:italic? italic boolean? #f] [element xexpr?] ...)
         txexpr?]{

Typeset contents as poetry, with line breaks preserved and the block centered on the longest line.
To set the whole block in italic, use @code{#:italic? #t} — otherwise, use @code{i} within the
block.

If the first element in an article is a @racket[verse] tag with the @racket[#:title] attribute
specified, that title is used as the article’s title if the normal @racket[title] tag is absent.

}

@defproc[(blockquote [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]{

Surrounds a block quotation. To cite a source, include a @code{footer} tag at the bottom.

}

@defproc[(blockcode [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]{

Typeset contents as a block of code using a monospace font. Line breaks are preserved.

}

@deftogether[(@defproc[(i      [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(em     [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(b      [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(strong [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(strike [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(ol     [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(ul     [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(item   [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(sup    [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(caps   [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?]
              @defproc[(code   [element xexpr?] ...) txexpr?])]{

Work pretty much how you’d expect.

}

@section{Convenience macros}

@defform[(for/s thing-id listofthings result-exprs ...)
         #:contracts ([listofthings (listof any/c)])]{

A shorthand form for Pollen’s @code{for/splice} that uses far fewer brackets when you’re only
iterating through a single list.

@codeblock|{
#lang pollen

◊for/s[x '(7 8 9)]{Now once for number ◊x}

◊;Above line is shorthand for this one:
◊for/splice[[(x (in-list '(7 8 9)))]]{Now once for number ◊x}
}|

}

@section{Defining new tags}

I use a couple of macros to define tag functions that automatically branch into other functions
depending on the current output target format. This allows me to put the format-specific tag
functions in separate files that have separate places in the dependency chain. So if only the HTML
tag functions have changed and not those for PDF, the @filepath{makefile} can ensure only the HTML
files are rebuilt.

@defproc[#:kind "syntax"
 (poly-branch-tag (tag-id symbol?))
 (-> txexpr?)]{

Defines a new function @racket[_tag-id] which will automatically pass all of its arguments to a
function whose name is the value returned by @racket[current-poly-target], followed by a hyphen,
followed by @racket[_tag]. So whenever the current output format is @racket['html], the function
defined by @racket[(poly-branch-tag _p)] will branch to a function named @racket[html-p]; when the
current format is @racket['pdf], it will branch to @racket[pdf-p], and so forth.

You @emph{must} define these branch functions separately, and you must define one for @emph{every}
output format included in the definition of @racket[poly-targets] in this file’s @racket[setup]
submodule. If you do not, you will get “unbound identifier” errors at expansion time.

The convention in this project is to define and provide these branch functions in separate files:
see, e.g., @filepath{tags-html.rkt}.

Functions defined with this macro @emph{do not} accept keyword arguments. If you need keyword
arguments, see @racket[poly-branch-kwargs-tag].

@margin-note{The thought behind having two macros so similar is that, by cutting out handling for keyword
arguments, @racket[poly-branch-tag] could produce simpler and faster code. I have not verified if
this intuition is meaningful or correct.}

}

@defproc[#:kind "syntax"
         (poly-branch-kwargs-tag (tag-id symbol?))
         (-> txexpr?)]{

Works just like @racket[poly-branch-tag], but uses Pollen’s @racket[define-tag-function] so that
keyword arguments will automatically be parsed as X-expression attributes.

Additionally, the branch functions called from the new function must accept exactly two arguments:
a list of attributes and a list of elements.

}