rust_lisp
lisp
Our great sponsors
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.
rust_lisp
-
Writing a simple Lisp interpreter in Rust
Well, the article is called "a simple Lisp", not "a fully featured Lisp". It's a demo, not a compliant implementation.
You may be interested by https://github.com/brundonsmith/rust_lisp though
-
What's everyone working on this week (31/2022)?
So to compensate, strop will now be usable as a library. So I'm making a thing which pulls in strop as a dependency and gives you a dialect of lisp for you to specify your function in. In the future, perhaps I'll do the same with Python and maybe others. In this way, the end users will have a better way to specify what they want.
-
Embedding Lisp in C++ – A Recipe
Plug: for fun I made a (less ambitious) version of this kind of thing for Rust which I ended up being pretty happy with
lisp
-
GitHub - mcobzarenco/zee: A modern text editor for the terminal written in Rust
I've been curious about https://github.com/ezekiiel/lust but I don't know its status as a project
-
June 2021 monthly "What are you working on?" thread
Since last month I've been working on garbage collection and string handling in my Lisp compiler. I've found writing the garbage collector to be hard but strings are fun :)
-
May 2021 monthly "What are you working on?" thread
I just added variable-arity functions to my lisp which compiles to Cranelift. I was blocked for a while trying to work out how to convince Cranelift to put arguments on the stack but eventually gave up and I now heap allocate a location for function arguments. It's not great for performance but it feels great to have finally finished it!
-
February 2021 monthly "What are you working on?" thread
I’ve been carrying on working on compiling my lisp this month. It’s been a fun couple weeks because I’ve finally gotten to the fun stuff like higher order functions, closures, and adding the ability to call into libc.
I’ve been working on my own lisp recently inspired by the series:)
What are some alternatives?
cargo-msrv - 🦀 Find the minimum supported Rust version (MSRV) for your project
bread - An expression based scripting language
aulang - simple and fast scripting language
sol2 - Sol3 (sol2 v3.0) - a C++ <-> Lua API wrapper with advanced features and top notch performance - is here, and it's great! Documentation:
gluon - A static, type inferred and embeddable language written in Rust.
clasp - clasp Common Lisp environment
c3c - Compiler for the C3 language
Fennel - Lua Lisp Language
stroming - Traits for a stream store, and an in-memory implementation.
fluid - The Fluid Programming Language
orion - Orion is a high level, purely functional programming language with a LISP based syntax.
rumi - The rumi compiler