dotfiles VS CIEL

Compare dotfiles vs CIEL and see what are their differences.

CIEL

CIEL Is an Extended Lisp. Scripting with batteries included. (by ciel-lang)
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dotfiles CIEL
6 13
3 143
- 0.7%
8.1 6.7
2 months ago 11 days ago
Common Lisp Common Lisp
- -
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.

dotfiles

Posts with mentions or reviews of dotfiles. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-10-06.
  • Show HN: A simple Pastebin Clone using Deno
    4 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 6 Oct 2023
    The colors are mostly from zenburn

    https://github.com/fiddlerwoaroof/dotfiles/blob/master/emacs...

  • Writing Small CLI Programs in Common Lisp (2021)
    5 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 5 Sep 2023
    Yeah, that’s definitely where I’ve ended up: I have a lot of lisp code, but it’s more of a toolbox for my shell (REPL) than standalone programs.

    However, I’ve settled on a pattern that works pretty well for the few small tools I write: https://github.com/fiddlerwoaroof/dotfiles/blob/18cecfc93bcf...

  • Show HN: Mount Unix system into Common Lisp image
    4 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 24 May 2023
    I use these keys every day for just about every sort of balanced delimiter manipulation I do in any language: https://github.com/fiddlerwoaroof/dotfiles/blob/eff889f0b749...

    A little below I bind this key map to the “,” prefix and I’ve found my layout of paredit commands pretty ergonomic to use long-term.

  • Paredit 25 Released
    6 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 26 Nov 2022
    What made a difference for me was figuring out the right keybindings. The default keybindings in emacs weren’t very ergonomic and so I came up with a more convenient set of keybindings (for evil-mode, since I prefer vim-style editing). They follow a nice pattern on the keyboard and made a huge difference.

    I eventually adapted them so I could have relatively consistent keybindings across vim/emacs/VSCode/IntelliJ and the results are here:

    https://github.com/fiddlerwoaroof/dotfiles/blob/b13240a42fa4...

    If you understand the elisp keybinding notation, it’s possible to use the C-, ones in VSCode.

  • Coming Home to Vim
    6 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 23 Oct 2022
    Yeah, I don’t have home-manager generate configurations for vim. I have home-manager generate a symlink to my version-controlled vimrc. This way I get the quick setup benefits of home-manager without the slow reload times.

    Incidentally, I just polished my script for working around that issue: https://github.com/fiddlerwoaroof/dotfiles/blob/master/scrip...

  • Do you use Paredit?
    4 projects | /r/lisp | 23 Dec 2020
    https://github.com/fiddlerwoaroof/dotfiles/blob/master/emacs.d/lisp/configurations/evil-conf.el#L67-L143

CIEL

Posts with mentions or reviews of CIEL. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-09-05.
  • Writing Small CLI Programs in Common Lisp (2021)
    5 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 5 Sep 2023
    and for CL: https://github.com/ciel-lang/CIEL/ (pre-alpha) CL with many batteries included (json, csv, http, CLI parser…) so the scripts start fast.
  • Sharpscript: Lisp for Scripting
    5 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 5 Aug 2023
    As a CL addict, this isn't unlike Babashka: fast-starting CL scripting with batteries included. https://github.com/ciel-lang/CIEL (alpha) (otherwise the solution is to build a binary)
  • It's 2023, so of course I'm learning Common Lisp
    11 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 26 Jul 2023
    > lots of interoperability libraries

    That's true. For cases when you want to start with a good set of libraries (json, csv, databases, HTTP client, CLI args, language extensions…), I am putting up this collection together: https://github.com/ciel-lang/CIEL/ It can be used as a normal Quicklisp library, or as a core image (it then starts up instantly) or as a binary.

    It can run scripts nearly instantly too (so it isn't unlike Babashka). We are ironing out the details, not at v1.0 yet.

    > handling a runtime error by just fixing the broken code--in-place, without any restarts [from the blog]

    Also (second shameless plug) I should have illustrated this here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jBBS4FeY7XM

    We run a long and intensive computation and, bad luck, we get an error in the last step. Instead of re-running everything again from zero, we get the interactive debugger, we go to the erroneous line, we compile the fixed function, we come back to the debugger, we choose a point on the stackframe to resume execution from (the last step), and we see our program pass. Hope this illustrates the feature well!

  • The Embeddable Common Lisp [pdf]
    2 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 10 Jun 2023
  • Improving REPL experience in terminal?
    11 projects | /r/lisp | 17 May 2023
    check out CIEL, one of it's goal is to be a quality terminal repl
  • networking and threads
    1 project | /r/lisp | 27 Apr 2023
    I've been doing the protohackers challenges in common lisp to learn, and I ran into a problem that is possibly a bug in the socket library, or much more likely in my misunderstanding it. At any rate the best workaround a found seems pretty ugly, so can anyone advice what would be the cleanest way to solve it, and how we're supposed to deal with sockets? The problem is basically make a tcp server, that forwards all connections to an upstream server, and does a regex find and replace on all the traffic that passes through. Here's my working solution. I haven't learned much how asdf and packages work yet, I am just using CIEL which is SBCL (2.2.9.debian) with a bunch of libraries already loaded, I think if you load usocket, usocket-server, cl-ppcre, and bordeaux-threads it should run. The program is simple, I just forward all traffic from the client to the upstream doing regex replacement on each line, and spawn a thread that handles forwarding all traffic from the upstream to the client with the regex replacement. The issue is that when the client disconnects, my program doesn't disconnect from the upstream, even when I call (close upstream) and (socket-close socket). Before closing the socket or stream, the connection shows as established in ss -tp and as belonging to the sbcl process. After calling close on the socket and stream, the connection still shows as established, just it no longer shows as belonging to the sbcl process, and tcpdump shows that the 4-way termination handshake is not sent. After killing the background thread that is also reading the same socket, the 4-way termination is sent, and the connection is closed. It seems like calling close on the stream or socket should close it? Are sockets or streams not safe to share between threads? Is there a cleaner way to handle closing the upstream connection when the client disconnects rather than calling destroy thread?
  • Common Lisp Implementations in 2023
    10 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 23 Feb 2023
    I quite agree, so I'm making a meta-library to have useful libraries available out of the box: https://github.com/ciel-lang/CIEL/ It's CL, batteries included. You can use it as a library, as a core CL image (loads up faster), and as a binary to have a REPL, and to run scripts:

        ciel --script myscript.lisp
  • CIEL Is an Extended Lisp. Batteries Included
    1 project | news.ycombinator.com | 9 Dec 2022
  • Babashka: GraalVM Helped Create a Scripting Environment for Clojure
    10 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 8 Dec 2022
    No, we have to build a binary, which starts up super quickly.

    I began to put together a "distribution" of useful CL libraries for everyday tasks: https://github.com/ciel-lang/CIEL/ It comes as:

    - a lisp core, which you can use in your editor setup instead of sbcl or ccl, the advantage is that it loads instantly with all these libraries built-in (instead of quickloading all of them when needed)

  • Any projects want/need help?
    8 projects | /r/lisp | 6 Oct 2022
    Hi there. I'd enjoy help on anything web development for openbookstore: https://github.com/OpenBookStore/openbookstore (especially now: setting up i18n) Or, we could work on the terminal REPL experience for the CIEL meta-package: https://github.com/ciel-lang/CIEL/ We could use a better base like cl-repl or better yet, Lish.

What are some alternatives?

When comparing dotfiles and CIEL you can also consider the following projects:

lone - The standalone Linux Lisp

quicklisp-client - Quicklisp client.

smart-god-mode - No tests yet for merging into main branch!

ichiran - Linguistic tools for texts in Japanese language

vscode-emacs-mcx - Awesome Emacs Keymap - VSCode emacs keybinding with multi cursor support

racket-gui-easy - Declarative GUIs in Racket.

vim-sexp - Precision Editing for S-expressions

arrows - Implements -> and ->> from Clojure, as well as several expansions on the idea.

symex.el - An intuitive way to edit Lisp symbolic expressions ("symexes") structurally in Emacs

cl-utils - GrammaTech Common Lisp Utilities

shcl - SHell in Common Lisp [Moved to: https://github.com/SquircleSpace/shcl]

common-lisp-standard-library