# sTodo Stuce's simple todo is a web app that let's you self host a simple todolist. The goal is to provide a minimalistic and fast todo list that is self hostable. ## Usage - can be used as is for a single user behind a vpn (for ex, wireguard) - can be setup for multi user with a reverse proxy and an authentification provider that supports trusted sso (for ex, nginx + authelia) ## Next goals - Make multi user support - [ ] write a minimal step by step guide to install with nix, - [ ] add some css to make it look nicer - [ ] add htmx to make more agreable without making js manadatory - [x] make api to allow usage with native app (a way to get every list that has been modified since date $date belonging from the user in a json or similar format) - [ ] document api to help create clients ## Version 0.0.3 Simple todo list webapp. Features : - add and delete (and soon share) groups that contain a list of todolists - add and delete todolists inside groups - add todolist items or edit complete list via text for easy manipulation - possibility to deploy easily via nix module with a flake - that's it, the goal is to keep it minimal !!! ## Haskell Setup 1. If you haven't already, [install Stack](https://haskell-lang.org/get-started) * On POSIX systems, this is usually `curl -sSL https://get.haskellstack.org/ | sh` 2. Install the `yesod` command line tool: `stack install yesod-bin --install-ghc` 3. Build libraries: `stack build` If you have trouble, refer to the [Yesod Quickstart guide](https://www.yesodweb.com/page/quickstart) for additional detail. ## Development Start a development server with: ``` stack exec -- yesod devel ``` As your code changes, your site will be automatically recompiled and redeployed to localhost. ## Tests ``` stack test --flag sTodo:library-only --flag sTodo:dev ``` (Because `yesod devel` passes the `library-only` and `dev` flags, matching those flags means you don't need to recompile between tests and development, and it disables optimization to speed up your test compile times). ## Documentation * Read the [Yesod Book](https://www.yesodweb.com/book) online for free * Check [Stackage](http://stackage.org/) for documentation on the packages in your LTS Haskell version, or [search it using Hoogle](https://www.stackage.org/lts/hoogle?q=). Tip: Your LTS version is in your `stack.yaml` file. * For local documentation, use: * `stack haddock --open` to generate Haddock documentation for your dependencies, and open that documentation in a browser * `stack hoogle ` to generate a Hoogle database and search for your query * The [Yesod cookbook](https://github.com/yesodweb/yesod-cookbook) has sample code for various needs ## Getting Help * Ask questions on [Stack Overflow, using the Yesod or Haskell tags](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/yesod+haskell) * Ask the [Yesod Google Group](https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/yesodweb) * There are several chatrooms you can ask for help: * For IRC, try Freenode#yesod and Freenode#haskell * [Functional Programming Slack](https://fpchat-invite.herokuapp.com/), in the #haskell, #haskell-beginners, or #yesod channels.