stack
clojerl
stack | clojerl | |
---|---|---|
1 | 12 | |
36 | 1,634 | |
- | 0.3% | |
0.0 | 5.1 | |
over 2 years ago | 6 months ago | |
Elixir | Erlang | |
- | Eclipse Public License 1.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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stack
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Elixir Protocols vs. Clojure Multimethods
I had most of these concerns when I was early learning the language. I found it annoying to have everything in modules. Now, however, I've come to appreciate the organization and structure that this forces upon the programmer.
It makes me structure my code and group related concerns at time of writing.
And with .exs files, you can have multiple modules in one file for quick scripting.[0]
[0]https://github.com/matteing/stack/blob/main/server/boilerpla...
clojerl
- Really hard convincing colleague to switch to Clojure
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Clojure Scripting on Node.js
Basically, you take a programming language and make it work on a platform that meant to be programmed using a different PL. Clojure is hosted by design - it's not Java, but can be used to program for JVM. It ain't Javascript, but can be used to target nodejs and browser; not an [official] CLR language, but you can write .Net programs. You can use Clojure to make Flutter apps with ClojureDart. You can integrate Python into Clojure with libpython-clj. Or write Clojure to target Erlang/OTP; or Rust; or R; There's even a clojure-like language for Lua - Fennel.
There's something about Clojure people like so much, they want it to work atop any platform.
https://github.com/Tensegritics/ClojureDart
https://github.com/clj-python/libpython-clj
https://github.com/clojerl/clojerl
https://github.com/clojure-rs/ClojureRS
https://github.com/scicloj/clojisr
https://fennel-lang.org
- On Repl-Driven Programming
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Which Programming language libraries can Clojure use as its own?
But there are also unofficial implementations—i.e. not JVM, JS, .NET—of Clojure for other host environments, e.g. Clojerl. And of course nearly everything /u/borkdude touches interops with something in some way.
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CL vs Racket
Tail call optimization/elimination isn't a property of functional languages - there are tons of non-functional languages with it, like Lua or even C, when compiled with -O3, to name a few. Besides, Clojure is a hosted language, so it shares the platform characteristics, and recur is a language-way of providing a construct for tail call looping. Clojure on BEAM for example, supports tail call elimination, because BEAM does. And Beam is a quite functional environment ;)
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Clojure, but without the JVM?
Clojerl: an implementation for the Erlang VM. The reader conditional is :clje.
- Clojerl 0.9.0 is out with features released in Clojure 1.9, including Spec
- Elixir Protocols vs. Clojure Multimethods
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haskell elixr or clojure
There's also an unofficial BEAM VM implementation
- London Clojurians talk: Clojure - JVM + BEAM = Clojerl (by Juan Facorro)
What are some alternatives?
meander - Tools for transparent data transformation
cloture - Clojure in Common Lisp
protocol_ex - Elixir Extended Protocol
core.match - An optimized pattern matching library for Clojure
nx - Multi-dimensional arrays (tensors) and numerical definitions for Elixir
defun - A macro to define clojure functions with parameter pattern matching just like erlang or elixir.
joker - Small Clojure interpreter, linter and formatter.
fib - Performance Benchmark of top Github languages
ClojureCLR - A port of Clojure to the CLR, part of the Clojure project
lazy-seq - Lazy sequences for Fennel and Lua (mirror)