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.
Kawa
- Kawa
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Emacs-like editors written in Common Lisp
Kawa (like Clojure) runs on the JavaVM, but has a longer pedigree (from 1996), good compatibility with standard Scehemes (including R7RS), and has a stronger emphasis on performance: It has optional types and semi-decent type inferance so it is easy to write code as performant as Java. It also has fast startup, and is unopinonated on how you run and bundle applications: it generates pretty vanilla class files that interoperate with Java easily. See https://www.gnu.org/software/org and https://gitlab.com/kashell/Kawa
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Oldest Scheme Implementations
Kawa is quite relevant, and it seems that the project started in 1996. Still actively maintained.
cl-lsp
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Show HN: Common Lisp Vim Compiler Plug-In
How this compares to using cl-lsp[1] with Neovim?
[1]: https://github.com/cxxxr/cl-lsp
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Lisp language server
Does this count? https://github.com/cxxxr/cl-lsp
- Common Lisp language server?
- Emacs-like editors written in Common Lisp
- From Common Lisp to Julia
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A Road to Common Lisp (2018)
It's a great article. Since then, we have more tools and resources so we can enhance it:
Pick and Editor
The article is right that you can start with anything. Just `load` your .lisp file in the REPL. But even in Vim, Sublime Text, and Atom [and also VSCode] you can get pretty good to very good support. See https://lispcookbook.github.io/cl-cookbook/editor-support.ht... (also Lem, a CL editor that works for other languages, Jupyter notebooks, Eclipse (basic support) and LispWorks (proprietary, advanced graphical tools).
> if anyone is interested in making a Common Lisp LSP language server, I think it would be a hugely useful contribution to the community.
Here's a new project used for VSCode: https://github.com/nobody-famous/alive-lsp There's also https://github.com/cxxxr/cl-lsp
Other resources
I already linked to it, but the Cookbook (to which I contribute) is a useful reference to see code and get things done, quickly. https://lispcookbook.github.io/cl-cookbook/
While I'm at it, my first shameless plug: after my tutorials written for the Cookbook and my blog, I wanted to do more. Explain, structure, demo real-world Common Lisp. I'm creating this course (there are some free videos): https://www.udemy.com/course/common-lisp-programming/?coupon... (ongoing -50% coupon for June).
Web Development
See the Cookbook, and the awesome list (see below). We have many libraries, you still have to code for things taken for granted in other big frameworks. I have some articles on my blog.
We have new very cool kids in town, especially CLOG, that is like a GUI for the browser. Check it out: https://github.com/rabbibotton/clog
Game Development
See again the awesome-cl list. And the Kandria game, in the making, all done in CL: https://kandria.com/ (it just got accepted for a Swiss grant, congratulations).
Unit Testing
We have even more test frameworks since 2018! And some are actually good O_o
Projects
To create a full-featured CL project in one command, look no further, here's my (shameless plug again) project skeleton: https://github.com/vindarel/cl-cookieproject you'll find the equivalent for a web project, lighter alternatives in the README, and a demo video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XFc513MJjos&feature=youtu.be
Libraries
He doesn't mention this list, what a shame: https://github.com/CodyReichert/awesome-cl => the CL ecosystem is probably bigger than you thought. Sincerely, only recently, great packages appeared: CLOG, cl-gserver (actors concurrency), 40ants-doc, official CL support on OVH through Platform.sh, great editor add-ons (Slite test runner, Slime-star modules…), Coalton 1.0 (Haskell-like ML on top of CL), April v1.0 (APL in CL), a Qt 5 "library" (still hard to install), many more… (Clingon CLI args parser, Lish, a Lisp Shell in the making, the Consfigurator deployment service, generic-cl)…
His list is OK, I'd pick another HTTP client and another JSON library (new ones since 2018 too), but that's a detail.
BTW, see also a list of companies: https://github.com/azzamsa/awesome-lisp-companies/
Community
We are also on Discord: https://discord.gg/hhk46CE and on Libera Chat.
Implementations
CLASP (CL for C++ on LLVM) reached its v1.0, congrats. https://github.com/clasp-developers/clasp/releases/tag/1.0.0
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is CLISP still recommended to use ?
If you’re already a vs-code user, then I get that. And the facilities do exist to do Common Lisp in vs-code: https://github.com/cxxxr/cl-lsp
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Common lisp LSP. Why there is no such a thing?
Third hit on DuckDuckGo https://github.com/cxxxr/cl-lsp
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Why there is no new "modern" (Common) Lisp IDE?
You mean like cl-lsp, or the Alive Visual Studio Code extension? These are admittedly works in progress, but I'm sure you'd be very welcome to contribute since you care so much about it!
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Common Lisp Study Group : Introduction to ASDF
By the way, there is already https://github.com/cxxxr/cl-lsp that provides some LSP support for Common Lisp. I believe there is no need to support LSP from asdf side ... you just need to write a bridge for it. I know the author personally and since he surely does not use VS code himself, I don't know that was his motivation in making this one.
What are some alternatives?
drracket - DrRacket, IDE for Racket
clede
sagittarius-scheme - A manual (beh...) clone from bitbucket to use hosted CI service which only support GitHub
ctags - A maintained ctags implementation
STk - STk is the ancestor of STklos (https://stklos.net) This repository contains fixes to allow the compilation of 4.0.1 on modern versions of GCC
alive-lsp - Language Server Protocol implementation for use with the Alive extension
cyclone - :cyclone: A brand-new compiler that allows practical application development using R7RS Scheme. We provide modern features and a stable system capable of generating fast native binaries.
lem-opengl - OpenGL frontend for the Lem text editor
DifferentialEquations.jl - Multi-language suite for high-performance solvers of differential equations and scientific machine learning (SciML) components. Ordinary differential equations (ODEs), stochastic differential equations (SDEs), delay differential equations (DDEs), differential-algebraic equations (DAEs), and more in Julia.
roswell - intended to be a launcher for a major lisp environment that just works.
doc - Flexible documentation generator for Common Lisp projects.
protocol.language-server - INCOMPLETE A Common Lisp implementation of the language server protocol