Arcadia
paip-lisp
Arcadia | paip-lisp | |
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6 | 67 | |
1,670 | 7,012 | |
0.0% | - | |
0.0 | 0.8 | |
about 1 year ago | 7 months ago | |
Clojure | Common Lisp | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
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Arcadia
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Do you use MonoBehaviours to implement behavior?
If ECS gets too boiler-platey for my liking I might try some of the "don't use MonoBehaviours" approaches people have suggested, perhaps with F# bundled into a .dll. I also saw that some mad scientists had bridged the gap between Clojure and Unity via a framework called Arcadia - we'll see!
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interested in learning lisp, (specifically for games, but also for everything else including tui and gui applications for linux. currently have next to no programming knowledge, can i get forwarded some resources and some tips on what exactly i should do? any videos i should watch?
arcadia adds clojure (a lisp) to unity as a scripting language. You get to use a very good and well documented 3d game engine while still scripting stuff in your game in a lisp. there's a godot version too. The blender>unity/godot pipeline is pretty easy and documented. However, these game engines themselves are a lot to learn for your first game, especially if you're doing unorthodox stuff with them such as using lisp you won't find many tutorials.
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Where Lisp Fails: at Turning People into Fungible Cogs.
Nowadays, Clojure can be used for this sort of stuff. Arcadia has been used to make real world games. Lead developer gave a talk about it a few years ago.
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Godot appreciation post
Clojure started out on the CLR before the decision was made to focus on the JVM instead, and some people still maintain an unofficial ClojureCLR port. Some people used that to make Arcadia, which builds on ClojureCLR to make it work in Unity. Here's an old video of someone Clojure's REPL-driven development to make on-the-fly scene changes, kind of cool.
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Unsure what to do with Clojure
Arcadia uses ClojureCLR to work with Clojure in unity. Also Godot engine version.
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Compiling a Lisp to x86_64 (2020)
My understanding is that the Clojure community points everyone to Arcadia[0] since it's maintained and a bit more public about what their exact goals are. Unfortunately, neither are terribly well documented and so I've not personally used either
[0]: https://github.com/arcadia-unity/arcadia
paip-lisp
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The Loudest Lisp Program
Have you seen https://stevelosh.com/blog/2018/08/a-road-to-common-lisp/ ? "Kludges" everywhere is applicable. On the other hand, having a function like "row-major-aref" that allows accessing any multi-dimensional array as if it were one dimensional is "sweeter than the honeycomb".
I still think CL code can be beautiful. Norvig's in PAIP https://github.com/norvig/paip-lisp is nice.
As for the inside-out remark, while technically you do it, you don't have to, and it's very convenient to not do. Clojure has its semi-famous arrow macro that lets you write things in a more sequential style, it exists in CL too, and there's always the venerable let* binding. e.g. 3 options:
(loop (print (eval (read))))
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Ask HN: Guide for Implementing Common Lisp
PAIP by Peter Norvig, Chapter 23, Compiling Lisp
https://github.com/norvig/paip-lisp/blob/main/docs/chapter23...
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The Meeting of the Minds That Launched AI
Emacs is so much more than a text editor! But I need to stay on topic...
I believe your assessment of LISP (and therefore of MacArthy)'s impact on AI to be unfair. Just a few days ago https://github.com/norvig/paip-lisp was discussed on this site, for example.
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Towards a New SymPy
Sounds like a great project idea to make a toy demo of this direction you'd like to see. Maybe comparable to https://github.com/norvig/paip-lisp/blob/main/docs/chapter15... and https://github.com/norvig/paip-lisp/blob/main/docs/chapter8.... which are a few hundred lines of Lisp each, but do enough to be interesting.
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A few newbie questions about lisp
You could look into Paradigms of AI Programming by Peter Norvig which might interest you regardless of Lisp content.
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Mathematical paradigm?
Lisp has great power, examine PAIP, part II chapters 7 and 8.
- Peter Norvig – Paradigms of AI Programming Case Studies in Common Lisp
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Evidence that GPT-4 has a level of understanding
A computer running Prolog reasons, and that only requires a couple of pages of code. So it seems feasible that the network could have learned some ability to reason within its network.
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Conversation with Larry Masinter about Standardizing Common Lisp
IMHO it's because lisp shines to manipulate symbols whereas the current AI trend is crunching matrices.
When AI was about building grammars, trees, developing expert systems builds rules etc. symbol manipulation was king. Look at PAIP for some examples: https://github.com/norvig/paip-lisp
This paradigm has changed.
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A lispy book on databases
Origen: Conversación con Bing, 4/4/2023(1) gigamonkey/monkeylib-binary-data - GitHub. https://github.com/gigamonkey/monkeylib-binary-data Con acceso 4/4/2023. (2) paip-lisp/chapter4.md at main · norvig/paip-lisp · GitHub. https://github.com/norvig/paip-lisp/blob/main/docs/chapter4.md Con acceso 4/4/2023. (3) bibliography.md · GitHub. https://gist.github.com/gigamonkey/6151820 Con acceso 4/4/2023.
What are some alternatives?
ArcadiaGodot
mal - mal - Make a Lisp
libpython-clj - Python bindings for Clojure
30-days-of-elixir - A walk through the Elixir language in 30 exercises.
godot-fsharp-tools - A Godot Engine plugin to simplify using F# through the C# Mono language.
Crafting Interpreters - Repository for the book "Crafting Interpreters"
obelix - Obelix: a purely functional static site generator
coalton - Coalton is an efficient, statically typed functional programming language that supercharges Common Lisp.
looped-in - A browser extension that displays Hacker News comments for the current webpage
picolisp-by-example - The source code of the free book "PicoLisp by Example"
cljs-tetris
slime - The Superior Lisp Interaction Mode for Emacs