slime
abcl
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slime | abcl | |
---|---|---|
14 | 6 | |
1,851 | 279 | |
1.8% | 0.7% | |
8.2 | 8.2 | |
2 days ago | 20 days ago | |
Common Lisp | Common Lisp | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
slime
- Emacs 28 can not run Slime
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Anyone know why newlines get randomly inserted when printing a list with format on emacs + slime?
Try https://github.com/slime/slime/commit/e6a71c725c8e13d7d4c40e6a6fa7b696575a8d01
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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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Common Lisp vs Racket
To provide a bit more context, most of SLIME is just Common Lisp code (https://github.com/slime/slime), with a bunch of Emacs Lisp code alongside to support interfacing with Emacs. But you don't need that Emacs Lisp code to take advantage of almost all of the functionality SLIME provides. For instance, if you want to know who-calls a function, there's some command in emacs to do it, but all that command is doing is just a bit of elisp code which sends a message to Swank (a server running inside Common Lisp) and Swank invokes some native CL code to figure that out and return the results, then finally a bit of elisp code presents the results in some way. Vim can do the same thing just fine with vimscript/python (what the Slimv plugin uses) or otherwise, the bulk of the work in figuring out the list of callers of some function is done by the CL code (and CL implementation itself).
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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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slime-pop-find-definition-stack not working
That's rather new, https://github.com/slime/slime/commit/789584a7acb15747678fa62a8fcfc8d1187be867 is probably about that.
- Offline Hyperspec? html, texinfo, org, something?
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Slime
With that headline on HN, I was expecting this: https://common-lisp.net/project/slime/
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Python REPL-driven development in Emacs
SLIME or Sly for Common Lisp, Geiser for most Scheme implementations, or racket-mode for Racket?
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Is there a possibility to have a master stack in bspwm like in dwm?
For example, some people that are Common Lisp programmers, but don't use GNU Emacs, may decide to use GNU Emacs because of the slime-mode workflow.
abcl
- ASDF:LOAD-SYSTEM
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ABCL 1.9.1 released
It's more that SVN makes us backwards compatible with all the URIs which refer to the last twenty years or so of development. Most (all?) development occurs in our git bridges at https://github.com/armedbear/abcl/ or https://gitlab.common-lisp.net/abcl/abcl/.
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Asami: A flexible graph store in Clojure
My first thought was a Truffle CommonLisp so you could integrate via the GraalVM.
https://github.com/charig/TCLisp
https://github.com/armedbear/abcl/issues/62
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ABCL -- can't instantiate a class
https://github.com/armedbear/abcl/issues/376#issuecomment-840912513
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Paul Graham recounts his work on Lisp and other things
Ashwin Ram's "An Ode to the Growth of Programs" https://github.com/armedbear/abcl/commit/d58dd55fc1abd9777b53fa9bc2dc5d349ab231b7
What are some alternatives?
sly - Sylvester the Cat's Common Lisp IDE
sbcl - Mirror of Steel Bank Common Lisp (SBCL)'s official repository
portacle - A portable common lisp development environment
roswell - intended to be a launcher for a major lisp environment that just works.
paip-lisp - Lisp code for the textbook "Paradigms of Artificial Intelligence Programming"
cozo - A transactional, relational-graph-vector database that uses Datalog for query. The hippocampus for AI!
hebigo - 蛇語(HEH-bee-go): An indentation-based skin for Hissp.
jvm-tail-recursion - Optimizer library for tail recursive calls in Java bytecode
bsp-layout - Manage layouts in bspwm (tall and wide)
sketch - A Common Lisp framework for the creation of electronic art, visual design, game prototyping, game making, computer graphics, exploration of human-computer interaction, and more.
common-lisp-jupyter - A Common Lisp kernel for Jupyter along with a library for building Jupyter kernels.
asami - A flexible graph store, written in Clojure