dotfiles
shcl
dotfiles | shcl | |
---|---|---|
6 | 1 | |
3 | 287 | |
- | - | |
8.1 | 10.0 | |
2 months ago | almost 3 years ago | |
Common Lisp | Common Lisp | |
- | Apache License 2.0 |
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
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Show HN: A simple Pastebin Clone using Deno
The colors are mostly from zenburn
https://github.com/fiddlerwoaroof/dotfiles/blob/master/emacs...
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Writing Small CLI Programs in Common Lisp (2021)
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...
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Show HN: Mount Unix system into Common Lisp image
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.
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Paredit 25 Released
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.
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Coming Home to Vim
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...
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Do you use Paredit?
https://github.com/fiddlerwoaroof/dotfiles/blob/master/emacs.d/lisp/configurations/evil-conf.el#L67-L143
shcl
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Show HN: Mount Unix system into Common Lisp image
It is usable. Interactive commands like sudo and htop work, some like less and fzf don't. So it ships a pager, `view`. It has a directory mode, a Lisp REPL with a debugger, completion…. It is not done, the author keeps hacking on it. Hackers invited to have a look.
- SHCL is a posix-like shell written in CL. https://github.com/bradleyjensen/shcl
What are some alternatives?
lone - The standalone Linux Lisp
smart-god-mode - No tests yet for merging into main branch!
vscode-emacs-mcx - Awesome Emacs Keymap - VSCode emacs keybinding with multi cursor support
vim-sexp - Precision Editing for S-expressions
symex.el - An intuitive way to edit Lisp symbolic expressions ("symexes") structurally in Emacs
vim-sexp-mappings-for-regular-people - vim-sexp mappings for regular people
unix-setup - setups, .bashrc and .vimrc for new unix like computers and virtual machines.
helix - A post-modern modal text editor.