om-sharp
sly
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om-sharp | sly | |
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9 | 14 | |
161 | 1,210 | |
0.0% | - | |
0.0 | 4.8 | |
over 1 year ago | 6 days ago | |
Common Lisp | Common Lisp | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | - |
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om-sharp
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Common Lisp and Music Composition
Other Common Lisp applications for music, written in LispWorks:
ScoreCloud, Music Notation: https://scorecloud.com
MusicEase, Music Notation: https://www.musicease.com/
OpenMusic, Music composition with a visual programming language: https://github.com/openmusic-project/openmusic/
OM#, based on OpenMusic: https://github.com/cac-t-u-s/om-sharp
Most of these applications are available for Mac and Windows, some even for Linux.
OpusModus (mentioned in the article) now is on Macs (Intel / Apple Silicon) and an upcoming version is promised for Windows: https://opusmodus.com
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Interesting examples of visual programming?
om-sharp
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Scheme vs CL? Differences? Pros and Cons?
For example IRCAM (French institute dedicated to the research of music and sound ) develops graphical/visual programming systems for music composition: OpenMusic is a long time project, which is Open Source, but runs only on top of LispWorks, because of its GUI capabilities. A project derived from OpenMusic is OM#, which also written on top of LispWorks. ScoreCloud is a commercial product written with LispWorks. Also OpusModus (a commercial music composition system written in Clozure CL) is currently being ported to LispWorks (mentioned by the developers): then it will be possible to run on new Macs and also on Windows.
- OM – Visual Programming – Computer-Assisted Music Composition
- om-sharp 1.4 released - Visual Programming | Computer-assisted Music Compositon
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Organize music samples with lisp - https://github.com/charlesneimog/OM-CKN
This is the code https://github.com/charlesneimog/OM-CKN, but it need of the OM-Sharp https://github.com/cac-t-u-s/om-sharp. Build in Lisp too but use some functions of AudioJack in C.
- Lisp in Art and Music
- OM# v1.3 released - Computer-Assisted Music Composition derived from OpenMusic
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Tools to work with microtonal music in LISP!
OM-Sharp: https://github.com/cac-t-u-s/om-sharp/releases
sly
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I programmed a SLY completion backend, it works, but I could use some help fine tuning it.
please someone create a pull request (or issue) on SLY github, to make it available to other SLY users. (I do not wish to have a github account and don't care about the copyright)
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Font Identification Request
Probably a silly question. I saw some Emacs gifs in sly’s README and found the font simple but comfortable. Would anyone using the same font mind sharing his/her setup?
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Lisp and cybersecurity !
I think lisp languages have a culture of not caring about security, (total speculation here) with roots going back to stallman decrypting the passwords and restoring anonymous access in the MIT lab. For example, quicklisp the main package manager people are using with common lisp is pulling packages over http. Normal lisp development spawns a tcp socket that accepts arbitrary code to execute. Emacs recently pushed a release fixing a vuln not because they thought it was important, but because their users cared and they realize it's a bad look to not push timely fixes to known vulns. All those I can't really fault cause they're just people in their free time, but clojure has major industry use and the default html templater (hiccup) doesn't escape html by default (well it does in version 2 but that's still alpha so most are on version 1), leading to most web backends written in clojure having cross-site scripting (XSS) vulns.
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So i wanna learn Common Lisp
With emacs your two choices are either SLIME or SLY. Slime is a good place to start - it's rock solid. Once you get moving you can make a judgement call on whether or not SLY has features you'd like over what SLIME has available.
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Are there plugins for Neovim that don't exist, that should exist, in your opinion?
A proper Neovim client for Slime or Sly. The closest is Vlime, but its UI is really janky.
- Sly: Sylvester the Cat's Common Lisp IDE
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What does your workflow look like on Linux?
SLIME or SLY for Common Lisp (if you want to work with it), Geiser for various Schemes
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Basic dev environment setup
This may sound very threatening, but Emacs is the champion for lisp/scheme support out of the box in my opinion. If you are trying Common Lisp, check sly: https://github.com/joaotavora/sly It’s installable via melpa: https://melpa.org/#/getting-started
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SLY with ListWorks
I have a Hobbyist version of LispWorks and would like to use it with SLY. However I get this weird behavior as expressed in: https://github.com/joaotavora/sly/discussions/513
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Difficulty installing packages with quicklisp
I tried to quickload c-mera into sbcl (using Emacs and SLY on Linux (SLIME should work, too)) and succeeded. here is what I did: 1) git clone https://github.com/kiselgra/c-mera 2) git clone https://github.com/didierverna/clon 3. open a SLY-REPL and (ql:quickload "net.didierverna.clon"), be sure it succeeds, if not check asdf paths 4. change to c-mera directory and do a dos2unix file on all files in all (sub)directories. 5. run autoreconf -if 6. run ./configure --with-sbcl 7. run make this failed on my system, I didn't try to solve that 8. open the SLY-REPL and enter (ql:quickload "c-mera") 9. in SLY-REPL enter (ql:quickload "cmu-c") 10. in SLY-REPL enter (in-package :cmu-c) 11. in SLY-REPL enter (cm-reader) 12. in SLY-REPL run first example code from readme
What are some alternatives?
OM-CKN - I want to provide a Library for OM and OM#. It will be useful to understant digital audio algorithms like FFT and others. My compositional things!!!!
slime - The Superior Lisp Interaction Mode for Emacs
openmusic - The OpenMusic visual programming / computer-aided composition environment
land-of-lisp-using-hunchentoot - Convert code for "Dice of Doom" from Barski's "Land of Lisp" to use Hunchentoot web server.
OM-JI - This Library aims to create an environment for the microtonal music composition, mainly for Just Intonation composition. This library constructs the theory of Harry Partch, Erv Wilson, and Ben Johnston.
portacle - A portable common lisp development environment
gtoolkit - Glamorous Toolkit is the Moldable Development environment. It empowers you to make systems explainable through experiences tailored for each problem.
cl-permutation - Permutations and permutation groups in Common Lisp.
weir - (deprecated) A system for making generative systems
fiveam-asdf - ASDF plug-in for defining test systems based on the FiveAM test library
erlt - Early prototype of ErlT, an experimental Erlang dialect with first-class support for static typing.
cl-warehouse - A sample Warehouse management app in Common Lisp