LASS
cider
LASS | cider | |
---|---|---|
2 | 16 | |
102 | 3,506 | |
- | 0.1% | |
4.6 | 9.4 | |
3 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Common Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
zlib License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
LASS
- Spinneret: A modern Common Lisp HTML generator
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Common Lisp Implementations in 2023
There was a great comment about LispWorks over on the reddit discussion, linked here[0]. I really need to give it a shot at some point, especially as someone doing CL professionally.
I know that Lisp is popular on HN but that it's mostly a kind of zoo like experience where the proper devs come here to gawk at us but I really cannot recommend it enough for any kind of work. We use it for stock market analysis but almost every piece of code we write is CL. I'm currently trying to convince people to switch over our CSS over to LASS[1].
0: https://www.reddit.com/r/Common_Lisp/comments/11979q4/commen...
1: https://github.com/Shinmera/LASS
cider
- CIDER 1.8 ("Geneva") is out!
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Spinneret: A modern Common Lisp HTML generator
> I do think cider (https://github.com/clojure-emacs/cider) has stuff regarding stepping debuggers, but I'm not sure how common it is to use it. Maybe other Clojure users can fill me in :)
I don't really care about stepping; for me the debugger is about inspecting the state of my program when an exception (maybe because I interrupted it, or because I inserted a breakpoint, or just because something went wrong) happens. Backtrace, local variables, evaluating forms at different stack frames and so-forth.
- Datomic Is Now Free
- CIDER 1.7 ("Côte d'Azur")
- CIDER 1.6 ("Buenos Aires") is out!
- CIDER 1.5 ("Strasbourg") is out!
- CIDER 1.4 ("Kyiv") is out!
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Thoughts on Clojure λ
This was a pain. I tried using vscode with calva, but gave up pretty soon after starting. Ended up using emacs with cider, which was pretty nice, but had a huge learning curve for me since I'm not an emacs user. (Maybe I am after this...)
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On New IDEs
I was wondering that what the author and other redditors here would think of/about Cursive, an affordable IDE for Clojure, while they have cider in Emacs as well.
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An Update on CIDER 1.2
I'm very excited about sideloader feature in nREPL 0.9 and the corresponding ability for CIDER to upgrade the connection, adding its middleware. But I don't see this connection upgrading feature ticket #3037 in the plans for CIDER 1.2, but the sideloader ticket #246 is listed in the plans for nREPL 0.9. It seems that #3037 is held only by #246, so if it will be solved by the time 0.9 release, will there be plans to supporting it in CIDER 1.2?
What are some alternatives?
ql-https - HTTPS support for Quicklisp via curl
lem - Common Lisp editor/IDE with high expansibility
spinneret - Common Lisp HTML5 generator
doom-emacs - An Emacs framework for the stubborn martian hacker [Moved to: https://github.com/doomemacs/doomemacs]
pomegranate - A sane Clojure API for Maven Artifact Resolver + dynamic runtime modification of the classpath
doom - Doom Emacs config
quicklisp-client - Quicklisp client.
origami.el - A folding minor mode for Emacs
conjure - Interactive evaluation for Neovim (Clojure, Fennel, Janet, Racket, Hy, MIT Scheme, Guile, Python and more!)
inf-clojure - Basic interaction with a Clojure subprocess
nrepl - A Clojure network REPL that provides a server and client, along with some common APIs of use to IDEs and other tools that may need to evaluate Clojure code in remote environments.
emacs-inspector - Inspection tool for Emacs Lisp objects.