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literatura.me

Measuring progress in literature and in other creative endeavours, like programming. Preparing a paper/presentation for YAPC::EU 2016.

This repo and branch contain scripts to process repositories and generate time series of lines changed in commits, as well as, if it is a literary work that has been continously integrated, to extract the number of words changed. You need to use the Test::Text module in order to process it in this way.

Maybe you are looking for the YAPC::EU 2016 presentations

The talk on analyzing creativity, or progress when writing books, is in this repo and also published as a GitHub page by means of reveal.js. The lightning talk the next day, focusing on several famous Perl modules, Dancer2, Moose, Mojo and Catalyst, same repo (this one). Take a look at it for a shorter intro.

How to use this on your repo (or any other, for that matter)

Perl needs to be installed. Do it the usual way or, better yet, using perlbrew. I'll be using cpanm in the instructions, so that is needed too. If you use perlbrew, which you should, you will have both.

Scripts for processing repositories are contained in the appropriately named scripts repository. So

cd scripts
cpanm --installdeps .

And then, to run the script itself, you can cd to the repo you want analyzed and

/path/to/scripts/get-diffs.pl <glob including all files you want to analyze> 

The repository has to be downloaded to your drive. By default, you will analyze the current repo, but you can also analyze others:

./get-diffs.pl <glob including all files you want to analyze> <repo directory>

This will generate a .csv file with lines as preffix and a name related to the repo name and glob. This file will contain a single column with the size of the commit, with size being the maximum of lines added/deleted.

There is no rule to what the glob should include, other than you should try and include only files that have been typed by hand, not those automatically generated by, well, code generators or LICENSE files, that kind of thing. The whole point of this is to analyze coding patterns as reflected by commit sizes, so non-human files make no sense.

What to do with this file

cd to ../stats. You can plug the file name into the first lines of creativity.Rmd and, if you have R and knitr, generate the file from rstudio or directly from R using knitr. Please check the knitr size for how to do this, or directly share your file in a repo, tell me via twitter to @jjmerelo, and I'll do it for you. Of course, that file includes author and stuff, so if you want to change conclusions, author or whatever, feel free to do so, it has the same license as the whole repo.

You can also add a link to these results in data.md if you so desire. Take a look at CONTRIBUTING.md to do it properly (don't worry, just a minimal set of rules).

What kind of repos will be interesting

You will need a repo with more than a few hundred commits to have some real effect showing up. And by real effect I mean power laws, maybe pink noise, all that adding up to self-organized criticality. Which is kind of cool.