rich4clojure
sci
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rich4clojure | sci | |
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6 | 20 | |
193 | 1,166 | |
- | 1.9% | |
2.7 | 7.2 | |
7 months ago | 7 days ago | |
Clojure | Clojure | |
Eclipse Public License 1.0 | Eclipse Public License 1.0 |
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.
rich4clojure
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How did you transition from C-style language to clojure ? I am having a hard time letting go of how I've been programming all my life.
The old 4Clojure site is not available any longer. I can (in a highly biased way) recommend using Rich4CLojure in the comfort of your favorite editor.
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Clojure – Differences with Other Lisps
I've been messing with Clojure/ClojureScript for a few years having previously had zero Lisp experience. Overall, I think Clojure does a good job of being both practical and lispy. It's a language that is for building real things.
I've been focusing on ClojureScript (https://clojurescript.org/) as you get the benefit of interoperating with the Javascript ecosystem. The fact that there's a strong community around both Javascript hosted and Java hosted gives a wealth of library options.
Overall, the tooling has been getting a lot closer to the sort of experience that contemporary developers expect. The Calva plugins integration with Visual Studio (https://calva.io/) makes it easy to get started - you can even run it online with gitpod (https://github.com/PEZ/rich4clojure).
That just leaves learning the language - the slight changes in syntax (brackets for different data types) definitely help early on, and for the most part Clojure discourages people going down the path of macros which means reading other peoples code is reasonably accessible. The main struggle is that it's a language used by a lot of advanced or full-time developers, so documentation is pretty dense and it can take a real commitment to understand the detail.
It may not be 'correct' enough if you're coming from other Lisps, but coming the other way from C/Python etc I've found it an accessible and practical option.
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Long-term funding update
Rich 4Clojure (editor/IDE based 4Clojure with a zero-install option)
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Guide: Get Started with Clojure in a full REPL-driven editor without installing anything
(And arlier this week I did an adaption of Rich 4Clojure, adding a zero-install option there as well.)
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Eclipse plugin CounterClockWise still an option?
A cheap (in terms of effort and impact on your computer) way to see how you like Calva is to try the Gitpod option of Rich 4Clojure: https://github.com/PEZ/rich4clojure
- Zero-install, yet full editor connected 4Clojure
sci
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What's the value proposition of meta circular interpreters?
I've tried researching this myself and can't find too much. There's this project metaes which is an mci for JS, and there's the SCI module of the Clojure babashka project, but that's about it. I also saw Triska's video on mci but it was pretty theoretical.
- Sci: Configurable Clojure/Script interpreter suitable for scripting
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Windmill: Open-source developer platform to turn scripts into workflows and UIs
https://github.com/babashka/SCI if it's a requirement for proper sandboxing
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Embedding cherry in an existing CLJS app for runtime eval
Since cherry is a compiler, the code generally runs faster than with SCI which is an interpreter. For many cases SCI is fast enough, but numerical computations in a hot loop isn't one of its strenghts:
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Compiled and Interpreted Languages: Two Ways of Saying Tomato
Startup and sustained performance are absolutely implementation issues. For example, SBCL will take its sweet time to make machine code out of Common Lisp, but CLISP will interpret and generate bytecode. Both are useful, and both implement the same language. Clojure on the JVM takes also takes plenty of time to start up, so some use an interpreter instead. Furthermore neither of these languages has a cost model, so the cost of anything is an implementation issue.
- Show HN: Programming Google Flutter with Clojure
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Third party integrations with a monolithic Clojure app
So far we have relied on an increasing number of home-grown integration points to our platform, where relevant combined with the excellent SCI (so we can write some Clojure-code when adhoc data conversions / calculations / tweaking is required).
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Scala native equivalent to Clojure
Also take a look at SCI, https://github.com/babashka/sci/blob/master/doc/libsci.md
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Langdev in Clojure
You probably want to take a look at sci if you are creating a DSL or want to use Clojure itself as your DSL.
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ClojureRS – Clojure interpreter implemented in Rust
Built with the lovely SCI library (https://github.com/babashka/sci) + GraalVM, probably the most useful GraalVM project I've seen in the wild so far.
Also, Babashka will probably always support more features than ClojureRS could ever, particularly the interop with the various Java classes/functions, as that'd be very hard to achieve in ClojureRS.
What are some alternatives?
talk-transcripts - Transcripts of Clojure-related talks
clojure-lsp - Clojure & ClojureScript Language Server (LSP) implementation
joker - Small Clojure interpreter, linter and formatter.
tailwindcss-typography - Beautiful typographic defaults for HTML you don't control.
hy - A dialect of Lisp that's embedded in Python
hotwire-rails - Use Hotwire in your Ruby on Rails app
4ever-clojure - Pure cljs version of 4clojure, meant to run forever!
mdx - Markdown for the component era
etaoin - Pure Clojure Webdriver protocol implementation
babashka - Native, fast starting Clojure interpreter for scripting
cloture - Clojure in Common Lisp
headlessui - Completely unstyled, fully accessible UI components, designed to integrate beautifully with Tailwind CSS.