blog/coding-on-an-ipad: bytewave fixes

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@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ date: 2018-04-14
# Coding on an iPad
As people find out, I am an avid user of Emacs for a lot of my professional and
As people notice, I am an avid user of Emacs for most of my professional and
personal coding. I have things set up such that the center of my development
environment is a shell (eshell), and most of my interactions are with emacs
buffers from there. Recently when I purchased my iPad Pro (10.5", 512 GB, LTE,
@ -14,14 +14,14 @@ such a large group of people who did a lot of their professional work from an
iPad.
The iPad is a remarkably capable device in its own right, even without the apps
that let me do things like commit to git or edit text files in git repos. Out
of the gate, if I did not work in a primarily code-focused industry, I am
certain that I could use an iPad for all of my work tasks and I would be more
than happy with it. With just Notes, iWork and the other built-in apps even,
you can do literally anything a consumer would want out of a computing device.
that let me commit to git or edit text files in git repos. Out of the gate, if
I did not work in a primarily code-focused industry, I am certain that I could
use an iPad for all of my work tasks and I would be more than happy with it.
With just Notes, iWork and the other built-in apps even, you can do literally
anything a consumer would want out of a computing device.
As things get more complicated though, you begin to want to be able to do
things like write code from it. My Macbook died recently, and as such I've
As projects and commitments get more complicated though, you begin to want to
be able to write code from it. My Macbook died recently, and as such I've
taken the time to try to get to learn how the iPad workflow is a little more
hands-on (this post is being written from my iPad even).
@ -36,9 +36,9 @@ this iPad:
I seem to have naturally developed two basic workflows for developing from this
iPad: my "traditional" way of ssh-ing into a remote server via [Prompt][prompt]
and then using emacs inside tmux and the local way of using [Texastic][texastic]
for editing text and then [Working Copy][workingcopy] to interact with Git
along with [Workflow][workflow] and some custom JSON HTTP services to allow me
to hack things together as needed.
for editing text, [Working Copy][workingcopy] to interact with Git, and [Workflow][workflow]
and some custom JSON HTTP services to allow me to hack things together as
needed.
## The Traditional Way
@ -64,13 +64,13 @@ the LTE.
## iPad-local Development
This surprised me just about as much as this header is surpsing you to read it.
Apple has done a phenomenal job at setting up a secure device. It is hard to
run arbitrary unsigned code on it.
Of all of the things to say going into owning an iPad, I never thought I'd say
that I like the experience of developing from it locally. Apple has done a
phenomenal job at setting up a secure device. It is hard to run arbitrary
unsigned code on it.
However, development is more than just running the code, development is also
writing the code. For writing the code, I've been loving Texastic and Working
Copy:
_writing_ it. For writing the code, I've been loving Texastic and Working Copy:
![](https://i.imgur.com/5RVt52w.png)
@ -88,10 +88,10 @@ Copy. Then I commit when I'm done and push the code away.
This is almost precisely my existing workflow with the shell, just with
Working Copy and Texastic instead.
There are downsides to this though. The inability to test your code as
effortlessly as it is to write it quickly becomes frustrating unless you have
CI set up and people don't care about a larger commit history (or if you rebase
changes onto master when merging). There is no code completion, gofmt or
There are downsides to this though. Not being able to test your code locally
means you need to commit frequently. This can lead to cluttered commit graphs
which some people will complain about. Rebasing your commits before merging
branches is a viable workaround however. There is no code completion, gofmt or
goimports. There doesn't seem to be any advanced manipulation or linting tools
available for Texastic either. I understand that there are fundamental
limitations involved when developing these kinds of mobile apps, but I wish
@ -103,23 +103,26 @@ really had the time to fully grok it yet. So far I have some glue that lets me
do things like share URL's/articles to a Discord chatroom via a webhook (the
iPad Discord client causes an amazing amount of battery life reduction for me),
find the currently playing song on Apple Music on Youtube, copy an article into
my Notes, turn the currently active thing into a PDF and some more that I've
my Notes, turn the currently active thing into a PDF, and some more that I've
been picking up and tinkering with as things go on.
There are some limitations in Workflow as far as I've seen. I don't seem to be
able to log arbitrary health events like mindfulness meditation into Workflow.
I was kinda hoping that Workflow would let me do that, I've been wanting to log
my mindfulness time with the Health app, but I can't find an app that acts as a
dumb timer without an account for web synching. I'd love to have a few quick
action workflows for doing things like logging 10 minutes of anapana, metta or
a half hour of more focused work.
able to log arbitrary health events like mindfulness meditation via Workflow as
the Health app doesn't seem to let you do that directly. I was kinda hoping
that Workflow would let me do that. I've been wanting to log my mindfulness
time with the Health app, but I can't find an app that acts as a dumb timer
without an account for web syncing. I'd love to have a few quick action
workflows for logging 10 minutes of anapana, metta or a half hour of more
focused work.
## Conclusion
The iPad is a fantastic developer box given its limitations. If you just want
to get the code or blogpost out, this device will help you focus into the task
at hand (literally) and just hammer out the functionality. You just need to get
the idea and then you just act on it.
to get the code or blogpost out of your head and into the computer, this device
will help you focus into the task at hand so you can just hammer out the
functionality. You just need to get the idea and then you just act on it.
There's just fundamentally fewer distractions when you are actively working
with it.
You just do thing and it does thing.