graalvm-clojure
Wren
graalvm-clojure | Wren | |
---|---|---|
7 | 44 | |
487 | 6,753 | |
0.4% | 0.2% | |
5.4 | 0.0 | |
5 months ago | 9 months ago | |
Clojure | Wren | |
Apache License 2.0 | MIT License |
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.
graalvm-clojure
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Faster load times for production deployments
Using graalvm when possible. More details (finding out if possible for your project) here: https://github.com/clj-easy/graalvm-clojure/tree/master/
- Loopr: A Loop/Reduction Macro for Clojure
- Joker
- What do you think about Racket, particularly as it compares with Clojure?
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Building A Fast Command Line App With Clojure CLI (tools.deps) and GraalVM
I haven't yet, no, but I've just barely gotten started. There's a repo here that tracks compatibility of several Clojure libraries: https://github.com/BrunoBonacci/graalvm-clojure
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Building A Fast Command Line App With Clojure
Even though there's no batteries-included way to manage Clojure projects, the community has put together a lot of great tools and guides the cover all the bases. The community seems to be converging around the official Clojure CLI and associated tooling as the preferred way to manage Clojure projects. It's extremely well designed, like most things Clojure, but, also like most things Clojure, it's very bare-bones. It's not an all-in-one command-line utility you can use to manage your whole project, like the angular or rails CLIs (which I didn't appreciate nearly enough in my former life 😢). You need to configure the Clojure CLI itself for it to be useful, but luckily that's really straightforward to do. What follows are the steps I did to make a new skeleton command-line app in Clojure. It follows the steps from this great guide, but I included the actual commands here because I use the Clojure CLI (clj) instead of lein to run things.
Wren
- Tinyssh
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Show HN: Wren – simple yet super extensible task management system
For a moment I thought it was about wren programming language... [1]
[1] https://wren.io/
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Attempting each AOC in a language starting with each letter of the alphabet
For "W" you could use Wren.
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loxcraft: a compiler, language server, and online playground for the Lox programming language
Bob Nystrom also has a blog, and his articles are really well written (see his post on Pratt parsers / garbage collectors). I'd also recommend going through the source code for Wren, it shares a lot of code with Lox. Despite the deceptive simplicity of the implementation, it (like Lox) is incredibly fast - it's a great way to learn how to build production grade compilers in general.
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Bevy 0.10: data oriented game engine built in Rust
Only kind of unrelated ... Every time I see the Bevy logo I'm reminded of Wren language https://wren.io/
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Are they all like this?
If you want a pure C99 (sadly not C89 like Lua) immensely fast embeddable language pure interpreter, wren is a great language with excellent features like overload by arity. There is a huge maturity gap between the languages tho.
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Most important language features not touched in the book "Crafting Interpreters"?
Check out the source to Wren: https://wren.io. It’s from the author of Crafting Interpreters and builds directly on what’s discussed in the book (essentially a more complete Lox) and adds several additional types, including an array.
- Why does Rust have parameters on impl?
- Liberating the Smalltalk lurking in C and Unix
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What are some good C programs I can read through?
The best C code I have ever read is that of wren.
What are some alternatives?
joker - Small Clojure interpreter, linter and formatter.
Lua - Lua is a powerful, efficient, lightweight, embeddable scripting language. It supports procedural programming, object-oriented programming, functional programming, data-driven programming, and data description.
immer - Postmodern immutable and persistent data structures for C++ — value semantics at scale
LuaJIT - Mirror of the LuaJIT git repository
clasp - clasp Common Lisp environment
ChaiScript - Embedded Scripting Language Designed for C++
clj-new - Generate new projects based on clj, Boot, or Leiningen Templates!
V8 - The official mirror of the V8 Git repository
Carp - A statically typed lisp, without a GC, for real-time applications.
Duktape - Duktape - embeddable Javascript engine with a focus on portability and compact footprint
jank - A Clojure dialect hosted on LLVM with native C++ interop
ChakraCore - ChakraCore is an open source Javascript engine with a C API. [Moved to: https://github.com/chakra-core/ChakraCore]