CSharpRepl
LIPS
CSharpRepl | LIPS | |
---|---|---|
14 | 39 | |
2,505 | 387 | |
- | 2.1% | |
8.3 | 9.9 | |
5 days ago | 1 day ago | |
C# | JavaScript | |
Mozilla Public License 2.0 | MIT |
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CSharpRepl
- Is .NET just miles ahead or am I delusional?
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The best C# REPL is in your terminal
The C# REPL I'm talking about is simply called... C# REPL. It's an open-source project created by Will Fuqua, and as of today, it has over 2k GitHub stars. It is distributed as a .NET tool and is cross-platform. In this blog post, I'm going to show you how to install it on Windows Terminal, but you can install it on any terminal emulator you prefer.
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It's 2023, so of course I'm learning Common Lisp
> The repl driven workflow is amazing and the lisp images are rock solid and highly performant.
do people not realize that basically everything vm/interpreted language has a repl these days?
https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/java-repl-j...
https://github.com/waf/CSharpRepl
https://pub.dev/packages/interactive
not to mention ruby, python, php, lua
hell even c++ has a janky repl https://github.com/root-project/cling
- How is C# interactive compared to F# REPL?
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Short video on LINQPad AI
Let me introduce you to my lord and savior https://github.com/waf/CSharpRepl
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Anyway to run LinqPad 7 with .net 8?
Not the answer you’re looking for, but I haven’t been able to run LinqPad since I moved to Mac OS. Polyglot notebooks plug-in for VS Code comes very close to LinqPad, or if you don’t mind Terminal/CommandLine csharprepl is amazing.
- Run C# Straight from Command line! (C# REPL)
- Run C# Straight from Commandline! (C# REPL)
- Best REPL for a language
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On Repl-Driven Programming
For REPLs, there are options like (my own) https://github.com/waf/CSharpRepl which stand on top of the Roslyn compiler infrastructure, which is quite extensive and can easily evaluate standalone functions and statements.
It's still nowhere close to the REPLs of lisp and smalltalk, but it's a step in a more flexible direction.
LIPS
- LIPS: Powerful Scheme based Lisp interpreter in JavaScript
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(Learn 'Scheme)
Sweet, I'll have to give that a go :)
Another option in browser land is lips[0], which exclusively targets a js backend.
[0] https://lips.js.org
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All Web frontend lisp projects
For Scheme implementations there are LIPS and biwascheme. I haven't done more than play around with them, so I can't really give an informed opinion about pros and cons or favorites.
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Extending a Language — Writing Powerful Macros in Scheme
Your example revealed a bug in my Scheme interpreter. This is an example that fails to match:
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What other Scheme parser tricks do you know?
In my interpreter, LIPS Scheme, vector literal syntax is created using a syntax extension, a token that is mapped to a function or a macro. So you can use things like this:
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How to list defined symbols?
I'm not sure about other Scheme interpreters but in my interpreter LIPS Scheme, there is (env) function that returns a list of symbols. You can also access environment objects e.g. (current-environment) return object that is used internally. And you can even access the scope chain because the env object has __parent__ property that returns the parent scope.
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May I see some of your projects? :)
Few of my Open Source projects: * jQuery terminal * LIPS Scheme * Gaiman * Sysend * Wayne
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Async / Await in Scheme
(define promise (--> '>(fetch "https://lips.js.org/") (then (lambda (res) (res.text))) (then (lambda (text) (. (text.match #/\s*([^>]+?)\s*<\/h1>/) 1)))))
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Yes we are men. Men is what we are.
ngl when I first saw the headline my first thought was, “Wait, bring CAR into JavaScript? Make it a Lisp? But hasn't it already been done?”
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If you were hired to create a new distribution of Lisp, what would you include?
Languages like Biwa Scheme and LIPS Scheme are good for running Scheme in the browser. But I would prefer compiling Scheme code to JavaScript in the server, then serving the compiled JavaScript image to the browser.
What are some alternatives?
Cocona - Micro-framework for .NET console application. Cocona makes it easy and fast to build console applications on .NET.
scheme-lsp-server
replay-csharp - An editable C# REPL (Read Eval Print Loop) powered by Roslyn and .NET Core
biwascheme - Scheme interpreter written in JavaScript
Gui.cs - Cross Platform Terminal UI toolkit for .NET
murex - A smarter shell and scripting environment with advanced features designed for usability, safety and productivity (eg smarter DevOps tooling)
rcf - RCF – a REPL-first, async test macro for Clojure/Script
atbswp - A minimalist macro recorder
gui.cs - Cross Platform Terminal UI toolkit for .NET [Moved to: https://github.com/gui-cs/Terminal.Gui]
osmosis-js - JS reference implementation of Osmosis, a JSON data store with peer-to-peer background sync
clojerl - Clojure for the Erlang VM (unofficial)
spleeter-web - Self-hostable web app for isolating the vocal, accompaniment, bass, and drums of any song. Supports Spleeter, D3Net, Demucs, Tasnet, X-UMX. Built with React and Django.