racket-gui-easy
racket
racket-gui-easy | racket | |
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8 | 188 | |
129 | 4,695 | |
- | 0.4% | |
7.8 | 9.7 | |
2 months ago | 5 days ago | |
Racket | Racket | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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racket-gui-easy
- Racket Language
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Racket: The Lisp for the Modern Day
Looks like you're already in Emacs. I strongly recommend racket-mode as mentioned in another thread.
With regard to prototyping GUI's I'd suggest taking a look at https://github.com/mfelleisen/7GUI. https://github.com/Bogdanp/racket-gui-easy could also be a good place to start.
With regard to Racket more generally, I'm probably not the best person to ask since I had a very high friction start where I just banged my head against the wall until things made sense.
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Humble Chronicles: Managing State with Signals
I took a similar approach in my Racket library, gui-easy[1,2]. Though I opted to not defer any computations, any observable (similar to a signal from the post) update propagates to observers immediately, and there's no incrementality -- observables are just boxes whose changes you can subscribe to. Regarding the disposal problem, I used weak references and regarding the where to take observables and where to take concrete values as input question, I decided that any place an observable can go in, a concrete value can as well and it's been a convenient choice so far. For fun, here's an example[3] that builds the todo UI from the post.
[1]: https://docs.racket-lang.org/gui-easy/index.html
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If you were hired to create a new distribution of Lisp, what would you include?
For native apps, I would devote coding resources to the Guile-GI project which generates Guile bindings to the cross-platform Gtk C library by way of the Gnome Object Introspection and Reflection library. I would also port the Racket gui-easy library over to Guile-GI so declarative GUIs could be written.
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What programming language is good to make GUI's
There is also gui-easy a declarative gui framework: https://docs.racket-lang.org/gui-easy/index.html
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7GUIs
It’s not the only version either
See https://github.com/Bogdanp/racket-gui-easy/tree/master/examp...
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racket
- Racket Language
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Racket–the Language-Oriented Programming Language–version 8.12 is now available
Racket—the Language-Oriented Programming Language—version 8.12 is now available from https://racket-lang.org
See https://racket.discourse.group/t/racket-v8-12-is-now-availab... for the release announcement and highlights.
Thank you to the many people who contributed to this release!
Feedback Welcome
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Racket version 8.11.1 is now available
Racket version 8.11.1 is now available from https://racket-lang.org/
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Ask HN: Does anyone Lisp without Emacs?
Racket (https://racket-lang.org) has an IDE (DrRacket) which isn't EMACS. ARC (which powers hacker news) is (was?) written in Racket.
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Douglas Crockford, author of ‘Javascript: the good parts’ and ‘How Javascript works’ will be giving the keynote presentation From Here To Lambda And Back Again at the thirteenth RacketCon.
Nice! Repeating a comment I just made on HN: I signed up for RacketCon, will be joining remotely. I am looking forward to it a lot. Usually I use the Racket language perhaps for 10% of my personal projects, but I am currently writing a Racket AI book, so all things Racket are of current interest. Past RacketCons have been a lot of fun. I usually use Common Lisp, but Racket is batteries included Scheme, and more, and is a very pleasant language and ecosystem. Just in case you don’t have Racket installed: https://racket-lang.org/
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Douglas Crockford to Keynote 'From Here to Lambda and Back Again' at Racke
I signed up for RacketCon, joining remotely. I am looking forward to it a lot. Usually I use the Racket language perhaps for 10% of my personal projects, but I am currently writing a Racket AI book, so all things Racket are of current interest.
Past RacketCons have been a lot of fun.
I usually use Common Lisp, but Racket is batteries included Scheme, and more, and is a very pleasant language and ecosystem. Just in case you don’t have Racket installed: https://racket-lang.org/
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Ask HN: What is the most suitable Scheme implementation to learn today?
I'd suggest Racket (https://racket-lang.org) which is a batteries-included language environment that includes scheme and has a lot of high-quality documentation.
Guile (https://www.gnu.org/software/guile/) isn't quite as learner-focused but is another great choice.
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What Programming Languages are Best for Kids?
How did I get to the bottom of the page and not ONE person has recommended racket?
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Setting up a Scheme coding environment in VS code?
The Racket fork of CS supports Apple Silicon natively, and can be installed independently: https://github.com/racket/racket/blob/master/racket/src/ChezScheme/BUILDING Chez adds a few features (threads, ffi, ...) to R6RS; there is a useful combined index to TSPL4 and the CS User Guide at http://cisco.github.io/ChezScheme/csug9.5/csug_1.html
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Is SICP an overkill for a 14 year old?
If you're using SICP in Scheme (or are you doing the JS version?) then you may want to look at How to Design Programs. It uses Racket which is a Scheme descendent so much of the language you've learned in SICP will work in it without issue. It also has a pretty good set of GUI and drawing capabilities you can find through the Racket docs page and will use some of with HTDP.
What are some alternatives?
bang.html - 💎 Good.HTML. A nice framework without the bad stuff. Lots of custom elements, and nice templates. Good. HTML [Moved to: https://github.com/crisdosyago/good.html]
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
7guis - 7GUIs is a GUI programming usability benchmark.
clojure - The Clojure programming language
bgjs
nannou - A Creative Coding Framework for Rust.
fidgetty - Widget library built on Fidget written in pure Nim and OpenGL rendered
antlr-tsql
CIEL - CIEL Is an Extended Lisp. Scripting with batteries included.
babashka - Native, fast starting Clojure interpreter for scripting
7GUI - the 7 gui project
coalton - Coalton is an efficient, statically typed functional programming language that supercharges Common Lisp.