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Adrian P. Dunston for Papa

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An Ode to My Favorite Line of Elixir !

Gather around, and I'll tell you the tale of my favorite line of code

A piece of advice, I thought it concise to bequeath in the form of an ode

|> IO.inspect(label: "!!ADRIAN #{__ENV__.file}:#{__ENV__.line}", pretty: true)

Pipes

We'll start with a pipe |> a wondrous device, feeds one call's return to another

Without such a token, our code would look broken, its calls piled up in a smother.

text_of_poem = "One fish\nTwo fish\nRed fish\nBlue fish"

# Without pipes
Enum.count(String.split(text_of_poem, "\n"))

# ==> 4

First argument in, next function begins; you can see at a glance it looks cleaner

Make functions designed with piped-calls in mind; Your test suite is sure to run greener

# With pipes
text_of_poem
|> String.split("\n")
|> Enum.count()

# ==> 4

Inspect

Now let us reflect on humble inspect/2, a device indescribably lucid

If your bug's a big stinker that's stuck in your thinker, inspect/2 makes it jump as if goose-ed

# Convert data structure to readable string
quoth = %{raven: "nevermore"}
inspect(quoth)

# ==> "%{raven: \"nevermore\"}"

inspect/2 by itself is more than a help, it converts any data to string form

And with option pretty, the output's less bitty; Your brain has more room for a brainstorm

quoth = %{raven: ["nevermore", "nevermore", "nevermore"], 
    poe: "Take thy form from off my door!"}

inspect(quoth) |> IO.puts()

# πŸ‘€%{poe: "Take thy form from off my door!", raven: ["nevermore", "nevermore", "nevermore"]}
# ==> :ok

# The pretty: true option gives us more readable spacing.
inspect(quoth, **pretty: true**) |> IO.puts()

# πŸ‘€%{
#    poe: "Take thy form from off my door!",
#    raven: ["nevermore", "nevermore", "nevermore"]
#   }
# ==> :ok

IO.inspect

IO.inspect/2 has dual effects, first it needs not a puts/1 to be candid,

The second more subtle, not run in a bubble, this function returns what it's handed

IO.inspect(quote)

# πŸ‘€%{raven: "nevermore"}
# ==> %{raven: "nevermore"}
# Inspection without interference!
text_of_poem
|> String.split("\n")
|> IO.inspect()
|> Enum.count()

# πŸ‘€["One fish", "Two fish", "Red fish", "Blue fish"]
# ==> 4

Now let's look at :label; It's part of the stable of options inspect/2 can make use of

ID your inspections for further reflection on whatever info's elusive

text_of_poem
|> IO.inspect(label: "Before split")
|> String.split("\n")
|> IO.inspect(label: "After split")
|> Enum.count()

# πŸ‘€Before split: "One fish\nTwo fish\nRed fish\nBlue fish"
# πŸ‘€After split: ["One fish", "Two fish", "Red fish", "Blue fish"]
# ==> 4

Calling Card

Now IO.inspect\2's not a thing to forget when your feature is primed for submission,

When you fit-and-finish, prestige will diminish with inspect lines as part of commission

Remind to remove and avoid such reprove with calling-card text you're alert to

Make it unique, add your mystique, and before you commit do a search-through

#!!ADRIAN - debug lines easier to spot in console
# Remember to grep and remove !!ADRIAN lines before you push

text_of_poem
|> IO.inspect(label: "!!ADRIAN Before split")
|> String.split("\n")
|> IO.inspect(label: "!!ADRIAN After split")
|> Enum.count()

# πŸ‘€!!ADRIAN Before split: "One fish\nTwo fish\nRed fish\nBlue fish"
# πŸ‘€!!ADRIAN After split: ["One fish", "Two fish", "Red fish", "Blue fish"]
# ==> 4

ENV file and line

Final reflection on one-line perfection confesses the fact that I'm slothful.

It feels such a bother, each label to author; is cutting and pasting so awful?

Now in walks dear ENV, our quite astute friend; she knows both the file and line number

With this pal in hand, inspect can be canned; and attention advance unencumbered

1  text_of_poem
2  |> IO.inspect(label: "!!ADRIAN #{__ENV__.file}:#{__ENV__.line}", pretty: true)
3  |> String.split("\n")
4  |> IO.inspect(label: "!!ADRIAN #{__ENV__.file}:#{__ENV__.line}", pretty: true)
5  |> Enum.count()

# πŸ‘€!!ADRIAN example.ex:2: "One fish\nTwo fish\nRed fish\nBlue fish"
# πŸ‘€!!ADRIAN example.ex:4: ["One fish", "Two fish", "Red fish", "Blue fish"]
# ==> 4

Coda - Clipboard Extension Tools

I hope you've admired this line so inspired by the folks who have taught me before,

And with your indulgence, I've one more divulgence, a quirk that can quickly be yours

Clipboard extension is carapal prevention; it works by saving you typing

Along with your copies, it pastes pre-typed drop-ins, so coding continues like lightning!

Ditto Clipboard Extension for Windows
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/p/ditto-clipboard/9nblggh3zbjq

Clipy Clipboard Extension for Mac
https://github.com/Clipy/Clipy

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