Skip to content
/ decide3 Public

Better decision-making in large groups, by encouraging development of proposals by forking and merging.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

hhucn/decide3

Repository files navigation

decide

Goals & Motivation

We aim to improve decision-making in groups by giving participants the tools to improve a set of proposals together. All that without the need of external influence —like a committee that provides proposals— that puts the participants strictly in the role of just a voter. To evaluate our ideas in the field, we built a prototype you can find below.

In an experiment in 2019 we noticed that involved participants in a decision not only want to express their own proposals, but also actively participate in the improvement of existing proposals. They used the means available to them to express these wishes and (mis)used the discussion function to propose improvements. The problem is that mere comments are not the same as proposing a new candidate to vote for.

We hope to move from commenting on why a proposal is not good or how it can be improved to creating new and improved proposals.

How to get started

You can start as many components of the project you like.When you just want to play with components in CLJS without the backend I recommend to only start the workspaces compiler.

yarn install


#### To use frontend + backend ####
# Start cljs compiler
npm run client/main
# You can find the UI of the compile server here:
# http://localhost:9630
# There you can kick of the compilation of the other targets.

# Start the backend:
clojure -A:dev -Dtrace -Dguardrails.enabled=true
Clojure 1.10.1
# The ns is defined in src/dev/user
user=> (start)
# after modifications of the backend code:
user=> (restart)
# visit http://localhost:3000

#### To only use the frontend ####
# Workspaces
npm run client/workspaces
# visit http://localhost:8023/workspaces

# CLJS Tests:
npm run client/tests
# visit http://localhost:8022

You can find the npm run scripts in package.json. To understand what is called, please refer to the docs of shadow-cljs: http://shadow-cljs.org/

When you import this project into Cursive/IntelliJ the jobs above are already available as: client/main, server and workspaces.

To connect to the CLJS nREPL:
  1. Connect to localhost:9000

  2. Execute (shadow/repl :main). (you can select another target of course)

Development Mode

Shadow-cljs handles the client-side development build.The file src/main/app/client.cljs contains the code to start and refresh the client for hot code reload.

In general it is easiest just to run the compiler in server mode:

$ npx shadow-cljs server
INFO: XNIO version 3.3.8.Final
Nov 10, 2018 8:08:23 PM org.xnio.nio.NioXnio <clinit>
INFO: XNIO NIO Implementation Version 3.3.8.Final
shadow-cljs - HTTP server for :test available at http://localhost:8022
shadow-cljs - HTTP server for :workspaces available at http://localhost:8023
shadow-cljs - server version: 2.7.2
shadow-cljs - server running at http://localhost:9630
shadow-cljs - socket REPL running on port 51936
shadow-cljs - nREPL server started on port 9000
...

then navigate to the server URL (shown in this example as http://localhost:9630) and use the Builds menu to enable/disable whichever builds you want watched/running.

Shadow-cljs will also start a web server for any builds that configure one.This template configures one for workspaces, and one for tests:

See the server section below for working on the full-stack app itself.

Client REPL

The shadow-cljs compiler starts an nREPL. It is configured to start on port 9000 (in shadow-cljs.edn).

In IntelliJ: add a remote Clojure REPL configuration with host localhost and port 9000.

then:

(shadow/repl :main)

will connect you to the REPL for a specific build (NOTE: Make sure you have a browser running the result, or your REPL won’t have anything to talk to!)

If you’re using CIDER see the Shadow-cljs User’s Guide and the comments in deps.edn for more information.

The API Server

In order to work with your main application you’ll want to start your own server that can also serve your application’s API.

Start a LOCAL clj nREPL in IntelliJ (using IntelliJ’s classpath with the dev alias selected in the Clojure Deps tab), or from the command line:

$ clj -A:dev -J-Dtrace -J-Dguardrails.enabled=true
user=> (start)
user=> (stop)
...
user=> (restart) ; stop, reload server code, and go again
user=> (tools-ns/refresh) ; retry code reload if hot server reload fails

The -J-Dtrace adds a JVM argument that will enable performance tracing for Fulcro Inspect’s network tab so you can see how your resolvers and mutations are performing.

The -J-Dguardrails.enabled=true turns on guardrails instrumentation of guardrails spec’d functions, which is a wrapper of Clojure spec that makes instrumentation and production-time elision (for performance and size) much easier.

Note
For real development, please use an editor that has REPL integration, like Cursive (recommended) or Spacemacs.

The URL to work on your application is then http://localhost:3000.

Hot code reload, preloads, and such are all coded into the javascript.

Preloads

There is a preload file that is used on the development build of the application app.development-preload.You can add code here that you want to execute before the application initializes in development mode.

Fulcro Inspect

Fulcro inspect will preload on the development build of the main application and workspaces.You must install the plugin in Chrome from the Chrome store (free) to access it.It will add a Fulcro Inspect tab to the developer tools pane.

Tests

Tests are in src/test. Any test namespace ending in -test will be auto-detected.

src/test
└── app
    └── sample_test.cljc          spec runnable by client and server.

You can write plain deftest in here, and it is preconfigured to support the helper macros in fulcro-spec as well.

Running tests:

Clojure Tests

Typically you’ll just run your tests using the editor of choice (e.g. Run tests in namspace in IntelliJ).

The tests are also set up to run with Kaocha at the command line for your convenience and CI tools:

$ clj -A:dev:clj-tests --watch

See the Kaocha project for more details.

Clojurescript tests

The tests can be run in any number of browsers simply by navigating to the test URL that shadow-cljs outputs.

CI support is done through the ci-test build in shadow, and via Karma.

If you start the ci-tests build in Shadow-cljs, then you can also run cljs tests in a terminal "watch mode" with:

npx karma start

Of course, this make CLJS CI easy:

npx shadow-cljs compile ci-tests
npx karma start --single-run

Running all Tests Once

There is a UNIX Makefile that includes all of the CI commands as the default target. Just run:

make

Workspaces

Workspaces is a project by Nubank that is written in Fulcro, and has great support for developing in Fulcro. It is similar to devcards but has a more powerful user interface, integration with Fulcro Inspect, and much more.

The source directory for making additions to your workspace is src/workspaces.

Important
Any namespace ending in -ws will be auto-detected and added to your workspace!

Standalone Runnable Jar (Production, with advanced optimized client js)

See tools deps projects like Depstar. You’ll need to make a release js build, optionally pre-compile your CLJ, and package it. We will likely add a demo of this process soon.