hunchentoot
c-mera
hunchentoot | c-mera | |
---|---|---|
6 | 7 | |
688 | 383 | |
0.6% | - | |
4.5 | 0.0 | |
7 days ago | over 1 year ago | |
Common Lisp | Common Lisp | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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hunchentoot
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Submissions to Spring Lisp Game Jam 2023
Thirteen Letters - front end uses parenscript, spinneret, and cl-css; back end uses hunchentoot/hunchensocket
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What are some uncommon languages you have used server side for webdev ?
Common Lisp (with http://edicl.github.io/hunchentoot/ )
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Building a Startup on Clojure
Not an expert, but I would expect hunchentoot https://edicl.github.io/hunchentoot/ for the backend and a Common Lisp "dsl" generating javascript for the frontend.
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MathB.in - A Mathematics Pastebin Written in Common Lisp
Doesn't seem so: https://github.com/edicl/hunchentoot/issues/24
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Show HN: Mathb.in – A Mathematics Pastebin Written in Common Lisp
I'd be happy to see a discussion on the issue: https://github.com/edicl/hunchentoot/issues/24
c-mera
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Submissions to Spring Lisp Game Jam 2023
Arguably Pacman Clone - it uses WISP (non s-exps syntax for any lisp) + C-Mera which is some kind of mix of C and CL, and is written mostly in CL.
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Is there a language with lisp syntax but C semantics?
c-mera does exist.
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jc - Meta-program C/C++ with JavaScript
Thanks, you're right. I chose JS because it is so well-known, but I think it does have some other advantages as well. For example, if you need to run a lot of compatibility test commands, or need to generate code via external programs, or even make network requests to get config values or something, you can do all of that in parallel with JS async instead of sequentially like configure. You might find https://github.com/kiselgra/c-mera interesting. It's similar to this project but uses Lisp and a unified syntax.
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Generate C code
I used https://github.com/kiselgra/c-mera for this purpose and it worked very well.
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Carp – A statically typed Lisp, without a GC, for real-time applications
That's a Lisp preprocessor for a non-Lisp language.
If you program in C using the Common Lisp c-mera preprocessor, or any of the other similar systems, it's the same thing.
You're writing everything in S-exps, and the expansions use conses, but the output is C; so that of course cannot call cons at run time.
https://github.com/kiselgra/c-mera
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Syntatic Sugar that compiles to C
even more interesting are the handful of projects layering lisp style macros on top of C. i've seen several go by over the years; a quick google search brought up c-mera and cmacro.
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Alternative to ECL?
If you look for lisp-like syntax in C: - cmera https://github.com/kiselgra/c-mera
What are some alternatives?
mathb - Share mathematics on the web with LaTeX and Markdown
c2ffi - Clang-based FFI wrapper generator
cl-css - Non-validating, inline CSS generator for Common Lisp
cl-raylib - Common Lisp binding of raylib
calm - Calm down and draw something, in Lisp.
janet-benchmarksgame - Versions of the "Computer Language Benchmarks Game" benchmarks for the Janet language.
4ever-clojure - Pure cljs version of 4clojure, meant to run forever!
chibi-scheme - Official chibi-scheme repository
schema - Clojure(Script) library for declarative data description and validation
cmacro - Lisp macros for C
ultralisp - The software behind a Ultralisp.org Common Lisp repository
cl-autowrap - (c-include "file.h") => complete FFI wrapper