lem
jzon
Our great sponsors
lem | jzon | |
---|---|---|
55 | 8 | |
2,059 | 137 | |
4.4% | - | |
9.9 | 7.2 | |
4 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
Common Lisp | Common Lisp | |
MIT License | 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.
lem
-
The Emacsen family, the design of an Emacs and the importance of Lisp (2023)
Direct Link to "Lem" the Common Lisp based "Emacs" discussed in the talk.
https://lem-project.github.io/
-
EmacsConf 2023: The Emacsen family, the design of an Emacs and the importance of Lisp - Fermin --> Lem (Youtube)
Lem is here -> https://lem-project.github.io/
-
Emacs-ng: A project to integrate Deno and WebRender into Emacs
There's also Lem, which has a good vim mode and is scriptable in Common Lisp (since it's built in CL) :D https://github.com/lem-project/lem/ It has: LSP support, a treeview, project-related commands, a directory mode, a POC git mode… with ncurses and SDL2 UIs.
- lem: Common Lisp editor/IDE with high expansibility
-
Lem v2.1.0 – Common Lisp IDE with high expansibility
New release of Lem, a hackablee ditor with high extensibility written in Common Lisp and with support for LSP.
Also, with a new webpage! https://lem-project.github.io/lem-page/
-
is there a reason not to use the lem editor for common lisp?
Oh, thanks. There is now describe-key to describe a keybinding, and documentation-describe-bindings to list all keys, grouped by modes. The result is given inside Lem, and generated as this .md file: https://github.com/lem-project/lem/blob/main/docs/default-keybindings.md
- Lem is the editor/IDE well-tuned for Common Lisp
- Lem - Common Lisp editor/IDE now with a webpage!
-
What are the enduring innovations of Lisp? (2022)
Install https://github.com/lem-project/lem/releases/tag/v2.0.0 and follow this free online book: https://gigamonkeys.com/book/
-
Lem 2.0.0 released! Now with an SDL2 frontend (CL editor)
Official release page: https://github.com/lem-project/lem/releases/tag/v2.0.0
jzon
-
Common Lisp JSON parser?
jzon https://github.com/Zulu-Inuoe/jzon/ is the newest and probably the most complete, the most robust and the most accurate. It explains everything in its readme. I have settled on Shasht so far.
-
How to create a post body for dexador
I think the consensus now for JSON libraries (it's a meme that there are way too many CL JSON libraries) is to use jzon (https://github.com/Zulu-Inuoe/jzon). It's the best one I've found.
-
SBCL Help wanted: capturing big stdout (100M) and json parsing
I use JZON for SAX-style parsing; it works very well. If you can arrange to read your input as a stream, you shouldn't have memory problem with the reading/parsing part of your project.
- JZON hits 1.0 and is at last on the latest QL release: a correct and safe JSON parser, packed with features, and also FASTER than the latest JSON library advertised here.
- What was your favorite Common Lisp release (implementation, library, tool, ...) in 2021?
- jzon - a correct and safe JSON parser.
What are some alternatives?
emacs - My emacs configuration
clog - CLOG - The Common Lisp Omnificent GUI
emacs-anywhere - Configurable automation + hooks called with application information
jingo - This package provides the ability to encode golang structs to a buffer as JSON very quickly.
Second-Climacs - Version 2 of the Climacs text editor.
kandria - A post-apocalyptic actionRPG. Now on Steam!
mg - Micro (GNU) Emacs-like text editor ❤️ public-domain
clingon - Command-line options parser system for Common Lisp
lem-opengl - OpenGL frontend for the Lem text editor
jsondiff - Compute the diff between two JSON documents as a series of RFC6902 (JSON Patch) operations
cider - The Clojure Interactive Development Environment that Rocks for Emacs
jonathan - JSON encoder and decoder.