What I meant was: where are the resources that teach how to tackle everyday chores?
O'Reilly has a lot of "Real world <niche lang.>".
Not finished "practical" software -- albeit it's utterly cool to see that there are working projects in numbers / good showcases.
It's fine to have a collection for scheme (like the endless and sometimes helpful "awesome x" collections).
I'm missing the "Automate the boring stuff" and the like.
Maybe I'm more irritated about the lack of adoption (and grumpy about that -- not really the OP). E.g. I don't get it that Nix has more outreach than Guix, despite even Nix-users sometimes agree that the language isn't a strong selling point (I don't know about the idiosyncrasies of Guile, seemed preferable at first glance).
What I meant was: where are the resources that teach how to tackle everyday chores? O'Reilly has a lot of "Real world <niche lang.>".
Not finished "practical" software -- albeit it's utterly cool to see that there are working projects in numbers / good showcases.
It's fine to have a collection for scheme (like the endless and sometimes helpful "awesome x" collections).
I'm missing the "Automate the boring stuff" and the like.
Maybe I'm more irritated about the lack of adoption (and grumpy about that -- not really the OP). E.g. I don't get it that Nix has more outreach than Guix, despite even Nix-users sometimes agree that the language isn't a strong selling point (I don't know about the idiosyncrasies of Guile, seemed preferable at first glance).