CSharpRepl
ql-https
CSharpRepl | ql-https | |
---|---|---|
14 | 6 | |
2,505 | 17 | |
- | - | |
8.3 | 7.7 | |
5 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
C# | Common Lisp | |
Mozilla Public License 2.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
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.
ql-https
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It's 2023, so of course I'm learning Common Lisp
Solutions for the lack of https:
- add in https://github.com/rudolfochrist/ql-https (downloads packages with curl)
- use another package manager, CLPM: https://www.clpm.dev (or the newest ocicl)
> CLPM comes as a pre-built binary, supports HTTPS by default, supports installing multiple package versions, supports versioned systems, and more.
- use mitmproxy: https://hiphish.github.io/blog/2022/03/19/securing-quicklisp...
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Ocicl – An ASDF system distribution and management tool for Common Lisp
Other options are:
- Quicklisp -really slick, libraries in there are curated. (with https support here: https://github.com/rudolfochrist/ql-https and here: https://github.com/snmsts/quicklisp-https.git)
- for project-local dependencies like virtualenv: https://github.com/fukamachi/qlot
- a new, more traditional one: https://www.clpm.dev (CLPM comes as a pre-built binary, supports HTTPS by default, supports installing multiple package versions, supports versioned systems, and more)
For recent Quicklisp upgrades: http://ultralisp.org/
Ocicl is very new (5 days) and tries a new approach, building "on tools from the world of containers".
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What do you think the risks/pitfalls of using Common Lisp are in a business?
You can use SSL with QuickLisp via ql-https
- quicklisp security (or total lack of it)
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Common Lisp Implementations in 2023
LPM's warning is not surprising. It's common for libraries (dare I say open-source ones?), even if they work well. It's part of the stability game, once they are marked 1.0, they are stable. LPM works well (as reported by others).
QL wants to do it portably, there are easy workarounds, but yeah…
(just saw https://github.com/rudolfochrist/ql-https)
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Securing Quicklisp through mitmproxy
That what I‘m doing: https://github.com/rudolfochrist/ql-https
What are some alternatives?
Cocona - Micro-framework for .NET console application. Cocona makes it easy and fast to build console applications on .NET.
tungsten - A Common Lisp toolkit.
replay-csharp - An editable C# REPL (Read Eval Print Loop) powered by Roslyn and .NET Core
bettercap - The Swiss Army knife for 802.11, BLE, IPv4 and IPv6 networks reconnaissance and MITM attacks.
Gui.cs - Cross Platform Terminal UI toolkit for .NET
thirteen-letters - Competitive word scramble in the browser, made for Lisp Game Jam (Spring 2023)
rcf - RCF – a REPL-first, async test macro for Clojure/Script
quicklisp-https
gui.cs - Cross Platform Terminal UI toolkit for .NET [Moved to: https://github.com/gui-cs/Terminal.Gui]
qlot - A project-local library installer for Common Lisp
clojerl - Clojure for the Erlang VM (unofficial)
BDFProxy - Patch Binaries via MITM: BackdoorFactory + mitmProxy.