1
0

make readmy use leisure project garden note

This commit is contained in:
Adrian Wannenmacher 2026-04-04 23:49:45 +02:00
parent 3dad5d33f3
commit f47e917db5
Signed by: tfld
GPG Key ID: 19D986ECB1E492D5

View File

@ -5,73 +5,10 @@ This project is a web based notepad specialized for keeping score in the game of
an online version of the game, and it has no social features. It is only intended to replace a
piece of paper.
Principles
----------
This is a hobby project, and I don't want to spend a lot of time maintaining it. Therefore, the
following principles will guide its development.
1. **No feature creep:** For the time beeing, this project will not grow beyond being a simple
score keeping tool. Logical expansions, like synching a session between users / devices, will
not be implemented, because they would be too complicated for the time I intend to spend on
maintenance.
2. **Simple and stable dependencies:** I have learned in past projects that fast moving
environments, like many modern JS frameworks, are very tedious to keep up with. Therefore all
libraries must be stable and consistent. Also, I don't want to spend much time wrangling npm.
Therefore all dependencies must be vendorable as a couple of files.
3. **Browser based development:** I don't want to spend a lot of time on build tools, transpilers,
and similar things. All code has to be able to run in the browser in the form it is written. All
dev tools (like the testing framework) have to be able to run in the browser.
4. **Targetting Baseline:** The limited time for maintenance means I won't be able to do testing
for all browser/version/os tripples. Instead, I'll target "baseline widely available" and rely
on it's correctness for portability. I'll also use features that are "baseline newly available",
but only with feature checking, which I'll only do for them.
5. **Extensive tests:** I don't want to spend a lot of time on bug hunting, therefore everything
that can be tested automatically should be.
6. **Good documentation:** I'll most certainly forget how some things work at some point. Thus it
is paramount to keep a good documentation, so I won't have to read through everything again.
### Trade-offs
The principles above provide structure and certain advantages to the project. However, they also
have a cost. While I have deemed it to be worthwhile in this case, I consider it important to at
least document the disadvantages.
1. No access to a lot of JavaScripts modern ecosystem.
2. No access to compile time features such as actual typechecking.
3. More network load that strictly necessary.
Build tools can provide minification, bundling and tree shaking. All of these are not available
to this project, but likely would decrease the total amount of data needed to be transfered.
However, likely it wouldn't actually be all that much, because it's a rather small application,
and it does its own caching with the service worker.
Also, most of the icons font could propably be cut away with some build tool. While I could do
that manually, it'd be too much hassle if I ever needed an additional icon.
4. Certain kinds of testing are impossible. For example, it's not really possible to test the
service worker from within the browser. Also, automated testing on pushes is not doable.
### Violations
In some cases I have deemed it acceptable to deviate from the above principles. These are the
following:
1. The `jsconfig.json` file is a build tool configuration file. It shouldn't be needed, as the
project doesn't use any build tools. However, it allows the LSP to be more usefull, thus
justifying its existence.
2. Nested CSS. It is so much more managable than repeating the same selectors over and over. Keep
in mind that the principles are to make the maintenence of this side project viable for me in
the long term. In ~4 months from this writing (2026-03-04) they become baseline widely available
and I would want to rewrite all the styles then. I deem this to be a worthwhile trade-off.
> **Leisure Project** <br>
> This is a [leisure project](https://garten.tfld.dev/Freizeitprojekt#^leisure). The resources for
> its development and maintenance are limited, which place several restrictions on it. The
> aforementioned link leads you to a more detailed explanation.
Structure
---------
@ -91,6 +28,23 @@ Structure
Those files are co-located with the stuff they contain tests for, to make them easier to manage.
10. `vendored/` contains copies of external dependencies, for direct use.
Notes
----------
### Violations of the Leisure Project Principles
In some cases the leisure project principles are violated. These are documented here, along with
a reason why this violation is preferable to strict adherence:
1. The **`jsconfig.json` file** is a build tool configuration file. It isn't needed, as the project
doesn't use any build tools, and therefore shouldn't be included. However, it allows the
language server to be much more usefull, thus justifying its existence.
2. **Nested CSS** is used, because it is much more managable than repeating selectors. This makes
maintenance a lot easier. Also, it becomes baseline widely available in two months and a week
from this writing (on 11.06.2026, from 04.04.2026). Therefore this time limited violation is
preferable to having to rewrite everything then.
Dependencies
------------