drracket
ulisp
drracket | ulisp | |
---|---|---|
4 | 33 | |
442 | 361 | |
0.7% | - | |
7.7 | 2.6 | |
8 days ago | about 1 year ago | |
Racket | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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drracket
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DrRacket 8.7 crashes to desktop on Windows...does anybody know how to prevent these?
I've filed a bug report on Github: https://github.com/racket/drracket/issues/596
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Emacs-like editors written in Common Lisp
The original version of DrRacket was written in C, but it has been rewritten in Racket a long time ago. https://github.com/racket/drracket
I use a mix of DrRacket, WinEdt and Geany (with more color in the matched parenthesis).
- Racket->Rhombus: To Sexp or not to Sexp?
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What language for an IDE
To be fair, I'm not exactly sure which parts of emacs are written in C, but all extensions which make it more than an editor (i.e. an IDE) are interpreted lisp. Still, I'm not convinced. Another example, DrRacket, the IDE for Racket is written entirely in Racket, and that's plenty fast as far as I can tell*. It's a bit slow to start up, but that's all Racket programs.
ulisp
- How to Write a (Lisp) Interpreter (In Python)
- Show HN: I Made a Lisp
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Lisp Badge LE
I love his projects too. He's also the creator of uLisp.
http://www.ulisp.com/
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Lisp in Space
Not CL, but there is ulisp (http://www.ulisp.com/) for microcontrollers, supposed to be really tiny, and there is Carp (https://github.com/carp-lang/Carp) which is without a GC so seems suitable for real-time stuff.
- uLisp: Lisp for Microcontrollers
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fe: A tiny, embeddable language implemented in ANSI C
There's also ulisp (for Arduino projects etc.): http://www.ulisp.com/
This is larger, because there are functions for accessing peripherals, and the core is more standard lispy with 'caadr' et.al., and it has a compacting GC, so images can be saved as a compact blob.
- ¿Any interpreted lenguage working in low memory microcontrollers?
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Anyone tried to run ECL on a Pi Pico?
You might consider uLisp, it's very Common Lispy for the memory constraints given (sans macros and splicing quote). And you can still connect to it and save an image. I've tried it and it works well enough. Here is the homepage.
- Scamp – a self-contained Forth computer
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What do you think of Forth?
Agreed - the interactivity is good. Lisp is close (have you seen http://www.ulisp.com/ - I can't believe they got into into that small a target!). Python is ok, but for some reason I don't use the REPL in the same way I do in Forth - I think calling functions is just harder somehow. Mostly is exploring valves from the Python REPL.
What are some alternatives?
generic-cl - Generic function interface to standard Common Lisp functions
ecl
racket-lang-org
Lua-RTOS-ESP32 - Lua RTOS for ESP32
tauri - Build smaller, faster, and more secure desktop applications with a web frontend.
ferret - Ferret is a free software lisp implementation for real time embedded control systems.
egui - egui: an easy-to-use immediate mode GUI in Rust that runs on both web and native
lispBM - An interpreter for a concurrent lisp-like language with message-passing and pattern-matching implemented in C.
vscode-ripgrep - For consuming the ripgrep binary from microsoft/ripgrep-prebuilt in a Node project
tinyscheme - TinyScheme is easy to learn and modify. It is structured like a meta-interpreter, only it is written in C.
cl-lsp - An implementation of the Language Server Protocol for Common Lisp
quickjs-esp32 - QuickJS port for ESP32