breeze
sly
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breeze | sly | |
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2 | 14 | |
18 | 1,206 | |
- | - | |
7.0 | 4.8 | |
13 days ago | 11 days ago | |
Common Lisp | Common Lisp | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | - |
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breeze
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CLEDE - the Common Lisp Emacs Development Environment
Other ongoing attempts exist (https://github.com/fstamour/breeze)
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Looking for feedback/help on a project
Here's my project: https://github.com/fstamour/breeze And the description from the readme:
sly
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Lisp and cybersecurity !
I think lisp languages have a culture of not caring about security, (total speculation here) with roots going back to stallman decrypting the passwords and restoring anonymous access in the MIT lab. For example, quicklisp the main package manager people are using with common lisp is pulling packages over http. Normal lisp development spawns a tcp socket that accepts arbitrary code to execute. Emacs recently pushed a release fixing a vuln not because they thought it was important, but because their users cared and they realize it's a bad look to not push timely fixes to known vulns. All those I can't really fault cause they're just people in their free time, but clojure has major industry use and the default html templater (hiccup) doesn't escape html by default (well it does in version 2 but that's still alpha so most are on version 1), leading to most web backends written in clojure having cross-site scripting (XSS) vulns.
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So i wanna learn Common Lisp
With emacs your two choices are either SLIME or SLY. Slime is a good place to start - it's rock solid. Once you get moving you can make a judgement call on whether or not SLY has features you'd like over what SLIME has available.
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Are there plugins for Neovim that don't exist, that should exist, in your opinion?
A proper Neovim client for Slime or Sly. The closest is Vlime, but its UI is really janky.
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What does your workflow look like on Linux?
SLIME or SLY for Common Lisp (if you want to work with it), Geiser for various Schemes
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Basic dev environment setup
This may sound very threatening, but Emacs is the champion for lisp/scheme support out of the box in my opinion. If you are trying Common Lisp, check sly: https://github.com/joaotavora/sly It’s installable via melpa: https://melpa.org/#/getting-started
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Setting Up Emacs for Lisp (SBCL)
try switching to sly (it should be a drop-in replacement) and see if that makes you happier. it comes with a lot of extra features enabled by default, relative to slime.
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Can't get Common Lisp Package Sly to Appear in Melpa Package List
I want to use the https://github.com/joaotavora/sly package, but it is nowhere to be found:
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How can I start learning Lisp and which dialect/compiler should I use?
Emacs is the pretty much the defunct editor, and Portacle, as mentioned by others, is actually an Emacs configuration using SLIME. There's also SLY, which is a fork of SLIME, that I don't see mentioned much here. There's a Racket mode for Emacs as well, if you don't want to use DrRacket.
What are some alternatives?
slime - The Superior Lisp Interaction Mode for Emacs
land-of-lisp-using-hunchentoot - Convert code for "Dice of Doom" from Barski's "Land of Lisp" to use Hunchentoot web server.
portacle - A portable common lisp development environment
cl-permutation - Permutations and permutation groups in Common Lisp.
fiveam-asdf - ASDF plug-in for defining test systems based on the FiveAM test library
cl-warehouse - A sample Warehouse management app in Common Lisp
lisp-books - Collection of Popular Lisp Books
Common-Lisp-Tangram-Solver - A Tangram Puzzle Solver in Common Lisp that is capable of solving arbitrary geometric tiling problems. CLIM (Common Lisp Interface Manager) is used for its GUI.
protest - PROtocol and TESTcase manager
RacerPorter - An Ontology Visualization & Authoring Workbench for KRSS-Based Description Logic & OWL Reasoners
nightshade - Lisp environment with Emacs-like editor
medley - A lightweight library of useful Clojure functions