3.7 KiB
Acord
Here's the 'sales' pitch:
"Hi there, do you enjoy casually solving project euler problems and are tired of using the spotlight bar as your primary calculator?" - Then this might be your kinda thing.
First, but least importantly, Acord is a native markdown editor... with a 'small' expression language baked in.
- Lines starting with
/=evaluate — the result is printed inline below it. - Tables are real, editable, and can carry formulas.
- Runs on Rust + iced + wgpu in a Swift shell on macOS.
- Sports my wicked cool Rust DSL, Cordial. Trust me, you'll love it. It's like Rust but you never have to remember any semi-colons. Don't panic - indentation, case, these things don't matter much either. It's a sensible, salad days sort of syntax.
The war - against the evil, as always.
Here's an analogy. Against the evil that is unsavory programming languages and — things... those things I don't like. Just generally, "things," sucky things. Evil.
Against this evil, let's say Rust is the best weapon made by humankind. It's what you need, it's the truth, it is the goodness within us all.
Python sure wanted to help, and golly, in its own ways it has. It was something like... the hand grenade. Effective at the start of the war, devastating it both its sweeping victories and its massive shortcomings. But I am grateful nonetheless, they did the trick when they were most needed. Not evil. Just bad. Normal bad. If the enemy is evil and the other side is good, that makes warfare just bad. This is just an analogy. I'm no expert on wars, or analogies for that matter. So bear with me.
Well, assuming everything I have said is true and just, then this,
- Cordial - ...would be like a garden hoe. Sure, you'll find plenty of them in a war. But that's just cuz lots of the country is farmland. Sure, you could do some damage with it. But mostly, its a garden hoe. It just does its job. Its no swiss army knife, nor scalpel, or even X-acto. It's the pocket knife you have, the one in your hand cuz there's an apple to cut and there's no need to get out the good knife, both the tool and the tool-be'd are already in hand, they'll handle it... man.
Happy? Me too.
I built Acord because I needed something between vim and the IDE — not a webapp (VS Code), not a stack of plugins held together with hope. A real, focused, native tool for thinking in. Notes I write turn into running calculators turn into working code, all in the same file.
What you can do here
Math
let m = 100
let v = 9.8
/= 0.5 * m * v^2
→ 4802
With use spice enabled, write with units and SPICE conventions.
use spice
fn L(f: Hz, c: F) -> H {
return 1 / (((2pi * f)^2) * c)
}
/= L(1000, 22n)
→ 1.15H
Take any function and invert it on a chosen variable in one line:
let f0 = solve!(f, L)
/= f0(1.15H, 22n)
→ 1000
Tables work the way you'd expect from Numbers or Excel: cells, formulas, ranges, references between tables, mutation from text blocks. Headings carry scope, so a table under ### Budget becomes @Budget from anywhere in the document.
Where to start
- Install Install → First Note
- Cordial Language Cordial Quickstart → Cordial Reference
Status
macOS only for now (Apple Silicon, macOS 14+). Windows is the next target. As in, I just installed a VM, will be done by the weekend.
