farolero
clasp
farolero | clasp | |
---|---|---|
16 | 48 | |
362 | 2,524 | |
- | 1.2% | |
2.4 | 9.7 | |
about 1 month ago | 6 days ago | |
Clojure | Common Lisp | |
Eclipse Public License 1.0 | - |
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farolero
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clojure from common lisp
You can use this library to get CL-style conditions and restarts in Clojure: https://github.com/IGJoshua/farolero
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Val on Programming: What makes a good REPL?
True, the CL REPL is more useful than the Clojure REPL, but CL has a 20-30 year head start in development. Plus, Clojure was developed as a hosted language, and runs on .NET, Javascript, JVM, and even Dart (in-progress).
Since exceptions are quite deeply integrated into those platforms (as opposed to conditions), it has "bled through" to the Clojure APIs, and, in turn, REPL.
Folks have written a CL-style condition/restart library for Clojure (https://github.com/IGJoshua/farolero) too.
- IGJoshua/farolero: Thread-safe Common Lisp style conditions and restarts for Clojure(Script).
- Opinions of "brothers and sisters"...
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How to handle errors or failed computations in clojure?
conditions/restarts are also a possibility https://github.com/IGJoshua/farolero
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ClojureRS – Clojure interpreter implemented in Rust
Someone added conditions/restarts to Clojure: https://github.com/IGJoshua/farolero
It does allow errors to be caught by the Repl and just.hkw to handle them.
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What are the advantages of Hy/Hissp over python bindings for CL/Clojure?
farolero
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Clojure REPL vs. CLI: IDE Wars
This is interesting tool[1] that allows much the same with Clojure
[1]: https://github.com/IGJoshua/farolero
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Do we have good use case based examples of usage of derive based hierarchies and multi-methods?
https://github.com/IGJoshua/farolero This uses derive hierarchies to enable general error handling.
- Show HN: Farolero – Common Lisp style-conditions and restarts for Clojure
clasp
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I Accidentally a Scheme
I accidentally a Common Lisp that interoperates with C++ (https://github.com/clasp-developers/clasp.git). We would also like to move beyond BDWGC and Whiffle looks interesting. I will reach out to you and maybe we can chat about it.
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Val, a high-level systems programming language
Clasp might be such a language, it seems.
https://github.com/clasp-developers/clasp
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The jank programming language (by Jeaye Wilkerson)
/u/jeaye are you aware of CLASP? https://github.com/clasp-developers/clasp https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mbdXeRBbgDM
- Clasp v2.3.0 · Bytecode compiled images, preliminary Apple Silicon support, LLVM16.
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Proof of Concept clang plugin that automatically binds C/C++ -> Lua
Sounds to me like CLASP; it automatically exports C++ objects to be used from Common Lisp also via llvm.
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Running Lisp in production @ grammarly
Now, the difference of compiling speed of SBCL and CCL is not so big. Look at cl-benchmark, LispWorks is really fast, CCL is on par with Allegro, SBCL is close to CCL. Or https://github.com/clasp-developers/clasp/wiki/Relative-Compile-Performance-of-clasp, it depends on specific project (SBCL sometimes faster, slower, alike), overall difference is not big.
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What help is needed for Lisp community in order to make Lisp more popular?
So..
"Why do you want to make Lisp more popular? If you were sucessful, what would be different in the world, and why is that desirable to you?"
Normally at this point I'd listen to the response, and ask more questions based on that. That would wind up with a very, very deep thread, so I'll break a cardinal rule and pre-guess at some answers.
This kind of question comes up pretty frequently. In many cases, I suspect the motivation behind the question is "Wow! Here's this cool tool I've discovered. I want to make something really useful with it. I want to do it as part of a community effort; share my excitement with others, share in their excitement, and know that what I'm making is useful because others find it desirable and are excited by it." The field could be cooking, sports, old machine tools, tiny homes, or demo scene. Its the fundemental driver for most content on HN, YouTube, Instructables, and such. It is a Good Thing.
If that is your motivator, then my suggestion is to find something that bugs you and fix it. You've already decided you're only interested in code, not other aspects. You said you preferred vim, but the emacs ecosystem has a very rich set of sharp edges that need filing off, and a rich set of tools with which to attack them.
One example: even after 50 years there's no open IDE which allows you to easily globally rename a Lisp identifier. I don't know about LispWorks or other proprietary environments, but you can't in emacs or vim do a right-click on "foo" in "(defun foo ()...)" and select a command which automatically renames it in all invocations. [Queue lots of "but you can..." replies here.] I don't think vim is up to the task of doing this internally. It would be possible in emacs; but would require a huge effort with lots of help from other people. If you emerged alive from that rabbit warren you'd join the company of Certified "How Hard Could it Be?" Mad Scientists such as Dr. "I just want to draw molecules" Meister [1] and "Wouldn't an OS in Lisp be Cool" Froggey [2].
[1] https://github.com/clasp-developers/clasp
[2] Mezzano https://github.com/froggey/Mezzano
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Linux Kernel 6.1 Released with Initial Rust Code
But also, there's a reason why most implementations readily make an effort to provide interoperability tools with a variety of runtimes. Clasp much like ABCL gives access to a whole library of other libraries trivially wrapped to interoperate with at little to no performance to cost (depending on how thin you make the wrappers, mainly).
- Common Lisp Clasp v2.0.0 released
What are some alternatives?
cloroutine - Coroutine support for clojure
Wren - The Wren Programming Language. Wren is a small, fast, class-based concurrent scripting language.
ex - In which we deal with exceptions the clojure way
gdb-dashboard - Modular visual interface for GDB in Python
wingman - Restartable exception handling for Clojure, allowing you to recover from exceptions without unwinding the stack.
CL-CXX-JIT - Common Lisp and CXX interoperation with JIT
clojure-scheme - Clojure to Scheme to C to the bare metal.
SICL - A fresh implementation of Common Lisp
cloture - Clojure in Common Lisp
graalvm-clojure - This project contains a set of "hello world" projects to verify which Clojure libraries do actually compile and produce native images under GraalVM.
py4cl2 - Call python from Common Lisp
maru - Maru - a tiny self-hosting lisp dialect