emacs-request
lparallel
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emacs-request | lparallel | |
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10 | 4 | |
613 | 239 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
about 1 year ago | over 1 year ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Common Lisp | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
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emacs-request
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Lsp-Bridge, Not Even Wrong
That is quite normal thing to do. Have you not seen Emacs Async? Take, a look, it is a useful thing. Or Emacs Request. Since Emacs does not have proper thread scheduler, that is the best next thing you can do.
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[ANN] alphapapa/plz.el: v0.3 release (HTTP library for Emacs)
Exciting! I've been using request.el for my own projects mostly out of habit. Could you outline some of the relative advantages of plz?
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Upload region to 0x0.st
Instead of shelling out to curl, use url.el or request.el.
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A vision of a multi-threaded Emacs
You mean, John Wigley's async package? Maybe it isn't used so often, however async processes are used in Emacs. Check for example functions 'native-async-compile' or 'async-byte-compile-file'. There is another package, request.el that uses async processes to do the network I/O (via curl).
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Tired of leaving emacs to calculate your primer melting temperatures?? tmcalculator.el can help!
This? https://github.com/tkf/emacs-request
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plz.el: An HTTP library for Emacs, using curl as a backend
You can already use emacs-request, it offers very nice asynchronous API and uses curl by default if present and falls back on Emacs url if curl is not found.
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Can't install a package
Have you tried (package! emacs-request), since that’s the name of the source repository (https://github.com/tkf/emacs-request)?
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Elisp: Request Package Synchronous Calls
It's possible that I'm brain dead but I'm struggling to wrap my head around the emacs-request code found here: https://github.com/tkf/emacs-request
- using Emacs org-mode as rest client replacement
lparallel
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Request for help merging PR to lparallel
A while ago (pretty long while actually) i've found this inconsistency in setting thread bindings in lparallel. Fixed it with this little PR https://github.com/lmj/lparallel/pull/41
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Consuming HTTP endpoint using Common Lisp
Parallel First package to use is lparallel to enable parallel processing without much coding on my side. Thing are easy here, you define lparallel:*kernel* with number of workers available for parallel tasks, define channel to receive results and start coding. I have actually used approach that does not even require channel for results.
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A vision of a multi-threaded Emacs
Users should work with higher level primitives like tasks, parallel loops, asynchronous functions etc. Think TBB, Thrust, Taskflow, lparallel for CL, etc.
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Are there public experiments with parallel and concurrent lisp 'engines'?
Observe, I am not asking for libraries or frameworks to enable writing threaded or task based and concurrent user applications, I am aware of those myself, for example lparallel for CL. What I am interested about is, if it is worth, or even possible, to parallelize core lisp runtime itself.
What are some alternatives?
plz.el - An HTTP library for Emacs
oneTBB - oneAPI Threading Building Blocks (oneTBB)
verb - Organize and send HTTP requests from Emacs
Eclector - A portable Common Lisp reader that is highly customizable, can recover from errors and can return concrete syntax trees
ob-http - make http request within org-mode babel
SICL - A fresh implementation of Common Lisp
walkman - Write HTTP requests in Org mode and replay them at will using cURL
Taskflow - A General-purpose Parallel and Heterogeneous Task Programming System
tmcalculator.el
Thrust - [ARCHIVED] The C++ parallel algorithms library. See https://github.com/NVIDIA/cccl
emacs-async - Simple library for asynchronous processing in Emacs
HVM - A massively parallel, optimal functional runtime in Rust