Exercism Exercises in Elm
The simplest way to install Elm is via Node.js/NPM.
If you don't already have Node.js installed on your computer, you can download it from the official site. Once you have Node.js up and running, follow these steps to install the Elm platform and elm-test.
$ npm install
Thank you so much for contributing! 🎉
Please start by reading the general Exercism contributing guide.
We welcome pull requests that provide fixes and improvements to existing exercises. If you're unsure, then go ahead and open a GitHub issue, and we'll discuss the change.
Please keep the following in mind:
-
Pull requests should be focused on a single exercise, issue, or change.
-
We welcome changes to code style, and wording. Please open a separate PR for these changes if possible.
-
Please open an issue before creating a PR that makes significant (breaking) changes to an existing exercise or makes changes across many exercises. It is best to discuss these changes before doing the work.
-
Follow the coding standards found in The Elm Style Guide. Please consider running elm-format before submitting a pull request.
-
Watch out for trailing spaces, extra blank lines, and spaces in blank lines.
-
Each exercise must stand on its own. Do not reference files outside the exercise directory. They will not be included when the user fetches the exercise.
-
Exercises should use only the Elm core libraries.
-
Please do not add a README or README.md file to the exercise directory. The READMEs are constructed using shared metadata, which lives in the exercism/problem-specifications repository.
-
Each exercise should have a test suite, an example solution, a template file for the real implementation and an
elm-package.json
file with theelm-test
andelm-console
dependencies. The CI build expects files to be named using the following convention:- The example solution should be named
ExerciseModuleName.example
. - The template file should be named
ExerciseModuleName.elm
. - Test file should be named
Tests.elm
.
- The example solution should be named
-
The recommended workflow when working on an exercise is to first create the implementation and test files,
ExerciseModuleName.elm
andtests/Tests.elm
. You'll likely want to copy one of the existing exercise directories as a quick start.-
Test the new exercise directly by running
npm test
from the exercise directory. -
Automatically run tests again when you save changes by running
npm run watch
from the exercise directory. -
Once the implementation of the exercise is complete, rename
ExerciseModuleName.elm
toExerciseModuleName.example.elm
and create the templateExerciseModuleName.elm
. -
Make sure everything is good to go by running all tests with
bin/build.sh
.
-
-
Please do not commit any Elm configuration files or directories inside the exercise, such as
elm-stuff
. Please include only the standardelm-package.json
. -
Test files should use the following format:
module Tests exposing (..) import Test exposing (..) import Expect import ExerciseModuleName tests : Test tests = describe "Bob" [ test "first test" <| \() -> True |> Expect.equal True , test "second test" <| \() -> False |> Expect.equal False ]
-
All the tests for Exercism Elm Track exercises can be run from the top level of the repo with
bin/build.sh
. Please run this command before submitting your PR. -
If you are submitting a new exercise, be sure to add it to the appropriate place in the
config.json
file. Also, please runbin/fetch-configlet && bin/configlet
to ensure the exercise is configured correctly.
To make implementing a new exercise a little bit easier, a new script was added
to the bin
folder. Running bin/stub-new-exercise <exercise-slug>
will setup
the exercise folder and then re-direct you back to this section of the README to
do the next steps.
The next steps after generating the files include
- Run
bin/configlet uuid
to generate a UUID for placing inconfig.json
- Add the exercise configuration to
config.json
, replacing the placeholders with the exercise specific informationNote: Each exercise configuration will be different by potentially more than the UUID. If you have questions, you can wait until submitting the PR and it can get resolved then.{ "core": false, "difficulty": 1, "slug": "<exercise-slug", "topics": null, "unlocked_by": null, "uuid": "<generated-uuid>" }
- The following search shows all the locations in the template files you need
to change before renaming them to just
*.elm
files instead of*.elm.template
.$ grep -r "{exercise}" exercises/<exercise> ./Exercise.elm.template:module {exercise} exposing ({method}) ./Exercise.example.elm.template:module {exercise} exposing ({method}) ./tests/Tests.elm.template:import {exercise} exposing ({method}) ./tests/Tests.elm.template: describe "{exercise}" $ grep -r "{function}" exercises/<exercise> ./Exercise.elm.template:module {exercise} exposing ({function}) ./Exercise.elm.template:{function} = ./Exercise.example.elm.template:module {exercise} exposing ({function}) ./Exercise.example.elm.template:{function} = ./tests/Tests.elm.template:import {exercise} exposing ({function})
- The
bin/stub-new-exercise
script has to pull down theproblem-specifications
repo to generate the README. You will also be able to get the canonical test data from that repo in theexercises/<exercise-slug>/canonical-data.json
file. With the test data, you should have enough to get started with the tests. - After the tests are written, you can start writing an implementation example
in
<exercise>.example.elm
. - Also remember to stub out the
<exercise>.elm
file, which is what users will get when they runexercism fetch
.
We were unable to find copyright information about the Elm logo, nor information about who designed it. Presumably Evan Czaplicki, creator of the Elm language, also made the logo, and holds copyright. It may also fall within the public domain, since it is a geometric shape. We've adapted the official Elm logo by changing the colors, which we believe falls under "fair use".