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Concepts

Concepts are the things that a programmer would need to understand to be fluent in a language. Concepts are taught by Concept Exercises and are used as prerequisites for Concept- and Practice Exercises. Concepts are placed on to a concept map when displayed to the student.

Metadata

Concept metadata is defined in the concepts key in the config.json file. The metadata defines the concept's UUID, slug and more.

Example

{
  "concepts": [
    {
      "uuid": "b9a421b2-c5ff-4213-bd6d-b886da31ea0d",
      "slug": "numbers",
      "name": "Numbers"
    }
  ]
}

Files

Each concept has its own directory within the track's concepts directory. The name of the concept's directory must match the slug property of the concept, as defined in the config.json file.

A Concept has two types of files:

Documentation files

These files are presented to the student to help explain the concept.

  • about.md: provide information about the concept for a student who has completed the corresponding concept exercise to learn from and refer back to (required)
  • introduction.md: provide a brief introduction to a student who has not yet completed the corresponding concept exercise (required)
  • links.json: provide helpful links that provide more reading or information about a concept (required)

Metadata files

These files are not presented to the student, but used to define metadata of the concept.

  • .meta/config.json: contains meta information on the concept (required)

Example

concepts
└── numbers
    ├── .meta
    |   └── config.json
    ├── about.md
    ├── introduction.md
    └── links.json

File: about.md

Purpose: Provide more detailed information about the Concept for a student who has completed the corresponding Concept Exercise to learn from and refer back to.

Presence: Required

After completing the corresponding Concept Exercise (otherwise known as "learning" a Concept), the Concept page will show the contents of the about.md file instead of the introduction.md file. The about.md file should provide students with comprehensive information on what they need to know to be fluent in the concept. At a minimum, this file should contain all information that is introduced in the Concepts' introduction.md document.

If the Concept introduces new syntax, syntax samples should be included. The student should not have to follow a lot of links to gain the knowledge that the file tries to convey. Instead the about.md should contain enough information to be understandable within its context.

The about.md file is not limited to the scope of the corresponding Concept Exercise. The content can require knowledge of other concepts that will be introduced later on. If other Concepts are mentioned, their respective introductions should be linked to (see internal linking for details).

Here some examples of what could be covered.

  • Popular usages for a Concept
  • Common pitfalls in a Concept's use (e.g. failing to consider thread-safety)
  • Limitations on use that may catch out the unsuspecting developer
  • Alternative approaches addressed in other Concepts (e.g. the recursion Concept might reference that the Higher Order Functions Concept offers an alternative approach to similar problems)
  • Compromises made for ease of learning or to accommodate the Exercism environment, e.g. multiple classes in single file
  • Similar features with which the Concept may be confused
  • Performance characteristics and memory usage, when a common consideration within that language
  • Don't refer to an exercise in the text, as this file is displayed outside the context of an exercise.

It is not the aim of the about.md file to provide a complete set of information on the Concept. As an example, imagine a language that has some older features for which experienced programmers (and maybe even the official docs/specs) recommend they should not be used anymore. Providing details on such features would be out of scope for the about.md file because they are not relevant to gain fluency. However, maintainers may choose to add a short block to acknowledge the old standards if a student might commonly come across those standards in the wild. However, this block should be marked as such.

The about.md file MUST be clearly structured, especially when it contains a lot of information. In the future there will also be support for marking parts as "advanced topics" to point them out to interested students without overloading others.

Example

# About

There are two different kinds of numbers in Elixir - integers and floats.

Floats are numbers with one or more digits behind the decimal separator. They use the 64-bit double precision floating-point format.

```elixir
float = 3.45
# => 3.45
```

Elixir also supports the scientific notation for floats.

```elixir
1.25e-2
# => 0.0125
```

## Rounding errors

Floats are infamous for their rounding errors.

```elixir
0.1 + 0.2
# => 0.30000000000000004
```

However, those kind of errors are not specific to Elixir. They happen in all programming languages. This is because all data on our computers is stored and processed as binary code. In binary, only fractions whose denominator can be expressed as `2^n` (e.g. `1/4`, `3/8`, `5/16`) can be expressed exactly. Other fractions are expressed as estimations.

```elixir
# 3/4
Float.ratio(0.75)
# => {3, 4}

# 3/5
Float.ratio(0.6)
# => {5404319552844595, 9007199254740992}
```

You can learn more about this problem at [0.30000000000000004.com][0.30000000000000004.com]. The [Float Toy page][evanw.github.io-float-toy] has a nice, graphical explanation how a floating-point number's bits are converted to an actual floating-point value.

File: introduction.md

Purpose: Provide a brief introduction to a student who has not yet completed the corresponding concept exercise.

Presence: Required

This file is shown if a student has not yet completed the corresponding concept exercise. It should provide a brief introduction to the concept.

  • Only information that is needed to understand the fundamentals of the concept should be provided. Extra information should be left for the about.md document.
  • Links should be used sparingly, if at all. While a link explaining a complex topic like recursion might be useful, for most concepts the links will provide more information than needed so explaining things concisely inline should be the aim.
  • Proper technical terms should be used so that the student can easily search for more information.
  • Code examples should only be used to introduce new syntax (students should not need to search the web for examples of syntax). In other cases provide descriptions or links instead of code.
  • Don't refer to an exercise in the text, as this file is displayed outside the context of an exercise.

Example

# Introduction

One of the key aspects of working with numbers in C# is the distinction between integers and floating-point numbers (numbers with zero or more digits after the decimal separator).

The two most commonly used numeric types in C# are `int` (a 32-bit integer) and `double` (a 64-bit floating-point number).

```csharp
int i = 123;
double d = 54.29;
```

File: links.json

Purpose: Provide helpful links that provide more reading or information about a concept.

Presence: Required

These might be official docs, a great tutorial, etc. These links do not replace the more contextual links within a concept's about.md file, but provide a quick set of overarching reference points for a student.

Each link must contain the following fields:

  • url: the URL it links to.
  • description: a description of the link, which is shown as the link text.

Links can also optionally have an icon_url field, which can be used to customize the icon shown when the link is displayed. If not specified, the icon defaults to the favicon.

[
  {
    "url": "https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/tutorials/intro-to-csharp/numbers-in-csharp-local",
    "description": "Numbers in C#"
  },
  {
    "url": "https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/language-reference/builtin-types/integral-numeric-types",
    "description": "Integral numeric types",
    "icon_url": "http://test.org/icon.png"
  }
]

File: .meta/config.json

Purpose: Contains meta information on the concept.

Presence: Required

This file contains meta information on the concept:

  • authors: The GitHub username(s) of the concept's author(s) (required)
    • Including reviewers if their reviews substantially change the concept (to the extent where it feels like "you got there together")
  • contributors: The GitHub username(s) of the concept's contributor(s) (optional)
    • Including reviewers if their reviews are meaningful/actionable/actioned.
  • blurb: A short description of this concept. Its length must be <= 350. Markdown is not supported (required)

If someone is both an author and a contributor, only list that person as an author.

Example

{
  "authors": ["FSharpForever"],
  "contributors": ["IWantToHelp"],
  "blurb": "F# has two types of numbers: integers and floating-point numbers."
}

Note that:

  • The order of authors and contributors is not significant and has no meaning.