blog backend writing to learn a new language
Signed-off-by: Xe Iaso <me@christine.website>
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title: "Want to Learn a New Language? Write a Blog Backend!"
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date: 2022-03-02
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tags:
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- beginner
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- backend
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author: Twi
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---
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Most of the content on my blog requires a fair bit of technical context to
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understand. This post is aimed at beginners as well as people with a lot more
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experience in the industry. It also covers a question that I get asked a lot:
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[What is a good project to use for learning a new programming language? It seems
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like a really open ended question and it can be hard to see where I would end up
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with such a thing.](conversation://Mara/hmm)
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Here is a project that you can use as an end goal for learning to program in a
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new language: I call it Within's Minimal Viable Blog. With this project you will
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build a blog engine that can also function as a portfolio site.
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[A portfolio site is a personal website where you can show off what you've done
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and helps you stand out from the crowd. The blog you are reading right now is a
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perfect example of a portfolio site. These kinds of sites are also important in
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a "keeping the internet weird" sense. You can do a lot more flair and
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customization to a website you own than you can to a Twitter profile or
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similiar.](conversation://Mara/happy)
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It's also designed to make you dip your toes into a lot of commonly used
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technologies and computer science fundamentals in the process. Namely it makes
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you deal with these buzzwords:
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- State management (remembering/recalling things persistently)
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- Basic web serving
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- HTML templating
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- Static file serving
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- Input sanitization (making sure that invalid input can't cause JavaScript
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injections, etc)
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- Sessions (remembering who a user is between visits to a page)
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[You can rip out a lot of this and still end up with a viable result, such as by
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making a static site generator. However if you have never done something like
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this before I'd be willing to argue that it's well worth your time to attempt to
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do something like this at least once.](conversation://Cadey/enby)
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At a high level, here's what you should end up with:
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- An abstract "Post" datatype with a title, publication date, a "URL slug" and
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content in plain text
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- A home page at `/` that describes yourself to the world
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- A list of blog posts at `/blog`
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- Individual blog posts at `/blog/{date}/{slug}`
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- A `/contact` page explaining how to contact you
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- An admin area at `/admin/*` that is protected by a username and password
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- An admin form that lets you create new posts
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- An admin form that lets you edit existing posts
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- An admin form that lets you delete posts
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- An admin view that lets you list all posts
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- Use a CSS theme you like (worst case: pick one at random) to make it look nice
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- HTML templates for the base layout and page details
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[All these admin views and forms are needed because they are what allow you to
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modify content on the blog. When you upload code to GitHub or use the web
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editor, this is the kind of thing that GitHub has implemented on the
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backend. You can also likely reuse the "new post" form as the "edit post" form
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because they do very similar things.](conversation://Mara/hacker)
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For extra credit, you can do the following extra things:
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- Add an "updated at" date that shows up if the post has been edited
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- Add tags on posts that let users find posts by tag
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- [JSONFeed](https://www.jsonfeed.org/) support
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- "Draft" posts which aren't visible on the public blog index or feeds, but can
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be shared by URL
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- Use CSRF protection on the admin panel
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- Deploy it on a VPS and serve it to the internet (use
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[Caddy](https://caddyserver.com/) to make this easier)
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- Pagination of post lists
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If you've never done a project like this, this may take you a bit longer. You
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will have to do some research on the best way to write things in your language
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of choice. A good starting language for this is something like Python with
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[Flask](https://flask.palletsprojects.com/en/2.0.x/) or Go with the standard
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library, namely with [net/http](https://pkg.go.dev/net/http) and
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[html/template](https://pkg.go.dev/html/template). This may take you a week or
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two. If you've done this kind of thing before, it may take a few days to a week
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depending on how much experimentation you are doing.
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[What the heck is a "URL slug"?](conversation://Numa/delet)
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[Most of the time a "URL slug" means some URL-safe set of characters that help
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humans identify what the content is about. If you look at the URL for this
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article, you can see that its slug is `new-language-blog-backend`, which is
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purely for humans to read. You can either take this as something you generate by
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hand on each post, or take the title, remove non-space and non-alphanumeric
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characters, lowercase it and then replace spaces with dashes. This would turn
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"Hello World!" into "hello-world" or similiar.](conversation://Mara/hacker)
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Here are a few steps that may help you get started doing this:
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- Serve a static file at `/` that contains `<h1>Hello, world!</h1>`
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- Create a SQLite connection and the posts table
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- Insert a post into your database by hand with the `sqlite3` console
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- Wire up a `/blog/{date}/{slug}` route to show that post
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- Wire up `/blog` to show all the posts in the database
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- Make static pages for `/` and `/contact`
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- Choose a templating language and create a base template
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- Edit all your routes to use that base template
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- Create the admin login page and a POST route to receive the HTML form and
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check the username/password against something in the SQLite database, creating
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a session for the admin panel
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- Create an external tool that lets you manually set your username and password
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- Create an admin view that shows all posts
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- Create a form that lets you create a new post and its associated POST handler
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- Create a form that lets you edit an existing post and its associated POST
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handler
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- Use a CSS theme to make it all look nice
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There are no wrong ways to do this. You can take shortcuts where you want. You
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can use Markdown for formatting posts. You can do anything you want based on
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this skeleton and it will be _your_ creation. Nobody else will have something
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exactly like this. It will let you stand out as a professional and can help you
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create your own home on the internet.
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[Something else to keep in mind here is that this first attempt will be ugly as
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sin. It will be hacky as all hell. However the important part here is that it
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works above all else. You can come back and make it better later. The first pass
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is always the most ugly, do not let this discourage you. This is a personal form
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of expression. Don't be afraid to let your personality show through your
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website. That's what helps to make you stand out in a sea of LinkedIn and
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Twitter profiles.](conversation://Numa/happy)
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[Yeah, getting started in something you've never really done before can be hard
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because you won't really have a good idea of what's "correct". The only
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"correct" thing in this project is that you can connect with a browser and see
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the things you expect. Take chances, make mistakes, get
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messy!](conversation://Mara/happy)
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If you do go through with this and want to show it off to people in a followup
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post, email your results to
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[blogchallenge2022@xeserv.us](mailto:blogchallenge2022@xeserv.us) with the
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following information:
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- Your name/alias (you don't have to use your legal name)
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- How much background you have in programming
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- The language you are writing this in
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- Screenshots you want to share
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- Anything you learned along the way, where you got stuck, what got you unstuck
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and anything else you want to say
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- If you uploaded it to GitHub, the repository URL would be nice but is not
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required
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- If you deployed it to a server, the link to where it's running would also be
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nice but is definitely not required
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The road to expertise is paved with the effort of experimentation. I hope that
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this open-ended project can help you learn things.
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