lisp-stat
gtk-mac-bundler
lisp-stat | gtk-mac-bundler | |
---|---|---|
6 | 1 | |
137 | 11 | |
2.2% | - | |
4.5 | 5.4 | |
about 2 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
Common Lisp | Python | |
Microsoft Public License | 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-stat
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Between Two Lisps (2020)
It's nice to see the CL ecosystem evolving. SBCL sees regular updates with new optimizations. The editor support is getting better: [Vim, Atom, Sublime, VSCode… have good to very good support](https://lispcookbook.github.io/cl-cookbook/editor-support.ht...), & Jupyter notebook, the Lem editor… and a new lisper started a CL editor based on Tauri: [Parrot](https://github.com/fonol/parrot). Cool projects emerge ([lisp-stats](https://github.com/Lisp-Stat/lisp-stat/), the [Sento / cl-gserver](https://github.com/mdbergmann/cl-gserver) actors library, the Kons-9 3D graphics library, the CLOG web-gui…)
> 50MB
With compression (zstd now), SBCL binaries weigh ±25MB. Start-up time is super fast. I built a standalone binary for my web app, it is straightforward to start it on the background and access it from an Electron window.
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How difficult would it be to create charts with Common Lisp and GTK?
Check out [lisp-stat](https://github.com/Lisp-Stat/lisp-stat)! It's a kind of R-like environment with data frames and plotting that might save you a bunch of time.
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help installing a package (data-frame)
Github discussion, for anything code or developer related
- Support for vectorized mathematical operations and a comprehensive set of statistical methods
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Lisp-stat: An environment for Statistical Computing
On a quick scour of the source code at https://github.com/Lisp-Stat/lisp-stat, I can see that there's a `Copyright (c) 1991 by Luke Tierney` on `base/variables.lisp` in the initial commit. Interestingly, the code is released under the Microsoft Public License, which includes the text: "Copyright Grant- Subject to the terms of this license, including the license conditions and limitations in section 3, each contributor grants you a non-exclusive, worldwide, royalty-free copyright license to reproduce its contribution, prepare derivative works of its contribution, and distribute its contribution or any derivative works that you create" which would imply that the answer to the GP's question needs to be "yes".
Note: I have no idea who Luke Tierney is or what his contributions to this area might be, which is a failing on my part.
gtk-mac-bundler
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How difficult would it be to create charts with Common Lisp and GTK?
Have you ever tried to get it to run on a Mac without Xcode? Even building C programs on Mac that use GTK requires a special hack to get the app to work. Maybe if you applied that hack to a build of SBCL it might work, but I've never tried it.
What are some alternatives?
common-lisp-stat - Common Lisp Statistics -- based on LispStat (Tierney) but updated for Common Lisp and incorporating lessons from R (http://www.r-project.org/). See the google group for lisp stat / common lisp statistics for a mailing list.
Measurements.jl - Error propagation calculator and library for physical measurements. It supports real and complex numbers with uncertainty, arbitrary precision calculations, operations with arrays, and numerical integration.
cl-gserver - Sento - Actor framework featuring actors and agents for easy access to state and asynchronous operations.
XLS-compat - XLISP-STAT compatibility library
xv6-public - xv6 OS
janet - A dynamic language and bytecode vm
cl-heredoc - Common Lisp reader heredoc dispatcher
parrot - A cross-platform Common Lisp editor