lisp-binary
ultralisp
lisp-binary | ultralisp | |
---|---|---|
1 | 16 | |
85 | 220 | |
- | 0.9% | |
6.8 | 8.3 | |
about 1 month ago | 14 days ago | |
Common Lisp | Common Lisp | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | - |
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.
lisp-binary
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Favorite Lisp project? Shameless plugs welcome & encouraged!
https://github.com/j3pic/lisp-binary - Library for reading and writing binary data formats.
ultralisp
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June 2023 Quicklisp dist update now available
If it reduces your pain, you can add it to https://ultralisp.org without any hussle.
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Deploying a web server in SBCL to cloud
- as a dockerized daemon (here is my Dockerfile describing a few microservices: https://github.com/ultralisp/ultralisp/blob/master/Dockerfile)
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Ocicl – An ASDF system distribution and management tool for Common Lisp
Other options are:
- Quicklisp -really slick, libraries in there are curated. (with https support here: https://github.com/rudolfochrist/ql-https and here: https://github.com/snmsts/quicklisp-https.git)
- for project-local dependencies like virtualenv: https://github.com/fukamachi/qlot
- a new, more traditional one: https://www.clpm.dev (CLPM comes as a pre-built binary, supports HTTPS by default, supports installing multiple package versions, supports versioned systems, and more)
For recent Quicklisp upgrades: http://ultralisp.org/
Ocicl is very new (5 days) and tries a new approach, building "on tools from the world of containers".
- Ultralisp – Fast Common Lisp Repository
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Review of 8 Common Lisp IDEs Which One to Choose? [EN Subs]
I'm the author and I'm using Emacs + SLY. Happily switched to Emacs from VIM about 10 years ago when decided to invest all my free time into Common Lisp.
And yes, I have real project experience – a lot of Commmon Lisp libraries at https://github.com/40ants and also I'm developing a hosting for CL library distributions: https://ultralisp.org
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OpenAPI Client Generator
So far openapi-generator is mostly tested on linux/sbcl and it should work for most spec files. It would be great to have some criticism/feedback/improvement ideas. You can download it from Ultralisp via (ql:quickload :openapi-generator)(you may need to update first (ql:update-dist "ultralisp"))
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How to replace Quicklisp and Qlot with CLPM (screencast)
See also Ultralisp, a Quicklisp distribution that builds every 5 minutes: https://ultralisp.org/ where you can publish packages.
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Looking for good common lisp projects on github to read?
There is also a repository behind Ultralisp.org: https://github.com/ultralisp/ultralisp
- Building a Startup on Clojure
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New Lisp-Stat Release
Quicklisp ships releases once a month, so it is very possible it didn't pick the latest release yet.
Your solution is to clone the repository into ~/quicklisp/local-projects/.
Another one would be to use the Ultralisp distribution, that ships every five minutes. https://ultralisp.org/
(ql-dist:install-dist "http://dist.ultralisp.org/"