LispREPL.jl
ergolib
LispREPL.jl | ergolib | |
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1 | 6 | |
20 | 140 | |
- | - | |
10.0 | 0.0 | |
over 4 years ago | almost 3 years ago | |
Julia | Common Lisp | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | - |
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LispREPL.jl
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Lisp in Space
I'm assuming OP was considering Julia as a pseudo-lisp. Julia doesn't look at all like a Lisp from the outside (no S-exprs except with (https://github.com/swadey/LispREPL.jl) but it takes many of Lisp's deeper lessons. It's (somewhat) homoiconic (see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/31733766/in-what-sense-a...), has an AST based macro system, and is an expression based language (no statements, everything returns a value), and has first class functions and types. Also multiple dispatch comes from taking CLOS/Dylan and getting rid of some of the parts that make a compiler writer hate you.
ergolib
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Lisp in Space
I have a macro in my personal library called BINDING-BLOCK that eliminates many though not all of the parens in common code idioms:
https://github.com/rongarret/ergolib/blob/master/core/bindin...
But like many of the sibling comments say, if you think getting rid of the parens entirely is desirable then you have missed the point, which is that Lisp code is not text, it's a data structure, a linked list, and the best way of serializing a linked list is with delimiters a the start and end, like so:
(1 2 3)
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Lisping at JPL Revisited
I believe the OP's ergolib provides an example. From https://github.com/rongarret/ergolib/blob/master/core/bindin..., the examples show code like:
;;; (bb
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Did anyone use Lisp in their home computers during the early PC revolution of the late 70s/early 80s (Apple, C64, etc.)? What was that experience like?
Yes. It was awesome. I used P-Lisp on an Apple II in the late 70s and it pretty much laid the foundation for my whole career. In the 80s I did my compiler class assignments in Lisp while everyone else was using Pascal or C. I got my assignments done in an hour while everyone else took days. I still got an A. I did my masters and Ph.D. thesis work using Coral Common Lisp (now Clozure Common Lisp) first on a Mac Plus, then a Mac II, then a Quadra. Nowadays I run CCL on an MBP. I still use some of the library code I wrote back in the 90s.
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Eliminating Format from Lisp (2003)
to get a list of primes under 100.
See https://github.com/rongarret/ergolib for an implementation of WITH-COLLECTOR and lots of other constructs that are IMHO the Right Way to write code.
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Common Lisp Resources
Any code modification is a potential security issue. There is nothing special about dynamic class redefinition in this regard.
I use it for deployment. I can deploy new code without having to take my application down. In fact, not only do all my existing instances get updated, but I also use an ORM [1] that automatically updates my database tables too.
[1] https://github.com/rongarret/ergolib/blob/master/layer1/sql....
- How do you use Lisp at work?
What are some alternatives?
opendylan - Open Dylan compiler and IDE
quilc - The optimizing Quil compiler.
Carp - A statically typed lisp, without a GC, for real-time applications.
weblog - a weblog
ulisp - A version of the Lisp programming language for ATmega-based Arduino boards.
PC-LISP - Franz Lisp dialect Lisp system
screenshotbot-oss - A Screenshot Testing service to tie with your existing Android, iOS and Web screenshot tests
AI-Feynman
snooze - Common Lisp RESTful web development
qvm - The high-performance and featureful Quil simulator.