dotfiles
atom
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dotfiles | atom | |
---|---|---|
2 | 13 | |
13 | 716 | |
- | 0.8% | |
9.0 | 0.0 | |
10 days ago | almost 1 year ago | |
Vim Script | JavaScript | |
- | 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.
dotfiles
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What is to go-to environment on Windows for Common LISP development?
Neovim works just fine. I use Neoterm to send-to-repl, here's what my config looks like. Your other options include vlime and slimv. I switched to neoterm because it's simple, explicit, and doesn't create unpredictable windows. Works for any other language just as well.
- What would you consider a modern lisp workflow/toolchain?
atom
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Zed, the new code editor from Atom developers, has entered open beta
I thought a lot of the Atom developers moved to create Pulsar Editor.
https://pulsar-edit.dev/
Also, the community forked Atom into a community edition (CE), still getting updates?
https://github.com/atom-community/atom/
What makes this "Atom Developer Editor" different than Pulsar or Atom-CE.
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Atom Was Archived Today
There's https://github.com/atom-community/atom, hoping that or similar will gain traction
- Announcing The Pulsar Text Editor (Continuing the Legacy of Atom)
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Github message saying Atom editor sunset > suddenly Atom has stopped working
A couple community maintained Atom forks have emerged: Atom Community and Pulsar. Of the two, Pulsar seems to be more actively developed.
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What is to go-to environment on Windows for Common LISP development?
Yes, I know Microsoft is archiving the Atom editor repo, but a public fork lives on. https://github.com/atom-community/atom/ atom-slime is probably still my favorite of the bunch. It actually uses Emacs SLIME. But I haven't looked at it in a couple years or longer.
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for web devs would it be better to use vs, vs code or atom?
Looks like the Atom community also started a fork of Atom a while back: https://github.com/atom-community/atom/
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What IDE do you use?
There is this: https://github.com/atom-community/atom
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So... where y'all going?
If you haven't heard, MS is retiring Atom in December 2022. I assume most of us will try the Atom community fork. But as back-up, etc., what editors are folks thinking about / exploring?
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Atom community fork seems growing, and let's have hope
After the announcement of Atom sunset, people started to continue it as a community fork. It seems it's growing and drawing attention: At July 10th (two days after the announcement), it had 86 stars, but now it has more than 230! It may be no comparable to the star count of Atom itself (around 58k), but it's rising.
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Atom Sunset
But - the community is taking the job to reimplement the servers. We're not sure about teletype, but packages will be able to be installed - well, in a different Atom binary that the community will provide. For more info: https://github.com/atom-community/atom/discussions
What are some alternatives?
cormanlisp - Corman Lisp
pulsar - A Community-led Hyper-Hackable Text Editor
atom-slime - Write lisp code efficiently with Atom
neoterm - Wrapper of some vim/neovim's :terminal functions.
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
slimv - Official mirror of Slimv versions released on vim.org
vscode-remote-oss - Remote development for OSS Builds of VSCode like VSCodium
vlime - A Common Lisp dev environment for Vim (and Neovim)
Haroopad - Haroopad - The Next Document processor based on Markdown
SLIMA - Superior Lisp Interactive Mode for Pulsar
KDevelop - Cross-platform IDE for C, C++, Python, QML/JavaScript and PHP