cloture
clj-chrome-devtools
cloture | clj-chrome-devtools | |
---|---|---|
8 | 1 | |
371 | 129 | |
- | - | |
4.5 | 3.1 | |
7 months ago | 5 months ago | |
Common Lisp | Clojure | |
- | MIT License |
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cloture
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Trouble defining a Lisp-1 DSL in Common Lisp
For reference, and to show that it's possible, you might be interested in how I did this for Cloture (Clojure in CL): https://github.com/ruricolist/cloture/blob/master/clojure/core.lisp
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The Jank Language: LLVM Hosted Clojure
Why not use something like https://github.com/ruricolist/cloture (a Clojure "adapter" that runs on Common Lisp) if you want that?
- Cloture – Implementation of Clojure in Common Lisp
- ClojureRS – Clojure interpreter implemented in Rust
- Clojure – Differences with Other Lisps
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Clojure, but without the JVM?
Clojure on Common Lisp: https://github.com/ruricolist/cloture
- Seeking clojure-styled concurrency operators for common lisp
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On Repl-Driven Programming
It does not offer the full experience. It has no breakloop and no ability to browse and edit the live running environment. It has no ability to rummage around inside the dynamic environment of a suspended function call, much less to redefine the suspended function or the types of its parameters, nor to restart the suspended call. Indeed, the JVM makes some of that stuff really inconvenient to do.
You cannot do everything from the Clojure repl in the way you can from a Common Lisp repl or from a Smalltalk worksheet.
I don't know that the Clojure language design forbids it; you might, for example, implement Clojure on top of a Lisp or Smalltalk environment and hook up their tools to Clojure through its interop. That might work, and ruricolist has been working on such an implementation called Cloture:
https://github.com/ruricolist/cloture
But existing Clojure implementations don't have the full set of tools.
clj-chrome-devtools
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Clojure – Differences with Other Lisps
For Clojure on the JVM I've seen etaoin (https://github.com/igrishaev/etaoin) and there's clj-chrome-devtools (https://github.com/tatut/clj-chrome-devtools). I would ask on Clojureverse or the Clojure Slack/Zulip for opinions.
For ClojureScript I guess there's lots of options since you can access the Javascript ecosystem.
One of the benefits of being hosted is that we can always fall back on the host language's options.
What are some alternatives?
janet - A dynamic language and bytecode vm
etaoin - Pure Clojure Webdriver protocol implementation
clojerl - Clojure for the Erlang VM (unofficial)
talk-transcripts - Transcripts of Clojure-related talks
lumo - Fast, cross-platform, standalone ClojureScript environment
planck - Stand-alone ClojureScript REPL
rich4clojure - Practice Clojure using Interactive Programming in your editor
ClojureRS - Clojure, implemented atop Rust (unofficial)
ferret - Ferret is a free software lisp implementation for real time embedded control systems.
awesome-clojure-likes - Curated list of Clojure-like programming languages.