trial
py4cl
trial | py4cl | |
---|---|---|
10 | 21 | |
832 | 221 | |
2.0% | - | |
9.9 | 2.3 | |
6 days ago | 6 months ago | |
Common Lisp | Common Lisp | |
zlib License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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trial
- Trial Game Engine Issue
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Submissions to Spring Lisp Game Jam 2023
Little Spark - made with Trial
- Show HN: Kandria, an action RPG made in Common Lisp is now out
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Kandria, an action RPG written in Common Lisp releases in a week on January 11!
The engine is called Trial. https://github.com/shirakumo/trial.
- Lisp-Stick on a Python
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interested in learning lisp, (specifically for games, but also for everything else including tui and gui applications for linux. currently have next to no programming knowledge, can i get forwarded some resources and some tips on what exactly i should do? any videos i should watch?
I don't know what the situation is like for 3D game programming in CL. Shinmera recently kickstarted a game but it's 2D I think and I don't know if his engine (https://github.com/Shirakumo/trial) does 3D. But regardless of what you're using, going into learning how to program while also trying to learn how to use the game engines available in the CL world will probably be a recipe for getting overwhelmed and discouraged. I'd recommend going through the Steve Losh post first and reading A Gentle Introduction to Symbolic Computation and/or Practical Common Lisp to get some solid general familiarity with using CL. Both are available online for free. You can also browse through the Cookbook: https://lispcookbook.github.io/cl-cookbook/
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Common lisp game development libraries
For graphics there's a lot of different variants and options. I use Trial, but that doesn't have any docs yet, I'm afraid.
- Trial: A fully-fledged Common Lisp game engine
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Our Lisp game, Eternia: Pet Whisperer is now out on Steam!
Kandria and Eternia both are built on top of the game engine Trial, which I and a few others at Shirakumo have been working on for some years now. Trial itself makes use of a bunch of lower level libraries like cl-opengl, GLFW, pngload, harmony, etc. but a huge amount of the codebase was written by me. If you're interested in its development, I recommend hopping by the #shirakumo channel on the Freenode IRC network. I'd be happy to answer questions there!
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Idiomatic way to handle non GC objects, i.e. OpenGL textures ?
A good way to do it is to keep a staging area of sorts that keeps track of the manually allocated objects and their state. When you allocate you batch all objects to allocate together and then execute the load in one go, updating the records in the staging area. Then, when you're ready to switch to a different scene or whatever, you diff the staging area against the current set of objects that need to be live and deallocate everything else in one go.
py4cl
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Need recommendation for IPC with Go
py4cl and cl4py rely on uiop:launch-program and python's subprocess respectively. These are portable to the extent uiop and subprocess are portable and do not require any additional installation.
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Lisp-Stick on a Python
If you want to use Python libs from CL, see py4cl: https://github.com/bendudson/py4cl the other way around, calling your efficient CL library from Python: https://github.com/marcoheisig/cl4py/ There might be more CL libraries than you think! https://github.com/CodyReichert/awesome-cl (or at least a project sufficiently advanced on your field to join forces ;) )
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The German School of Lisp (2011)
FYI you can call Python from CL: https://github.com/bendudson/py4cl and CL from Python: https://github.com/marcoheisig/cl4py/
If you don't know Emacs, see other editors: https://lispcookbook.github.io/cl-cookbook/editor-support.ht... If you want the more Smalltalk-like experience I'd go with the free LispWorks version: it has many GUI panes that allow to watch and discover the state of the program.
I personally couldn't stay long with Hylang. You won't get CL niceties: more language features, performance, standalone binaries, interactive debugger (all the niceties of an image-based development)…
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Plotting
I ended up using a fair bit of matplotlib through college and with colleagues. I too don't want to use python, but I also don't like throwing away its libraries, and I'm too lazy to invest in other* plotting ecosystems. In effect, I use up using matplotlib through py4cl/2.
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numericals - Performance of NumPy with the goodness of Common Lisp
Note that it is not my aim to replace the python ecosystem; I think that is far too lofy a goal to be of any good. My original intention was to interoperate with python through py4cl/2 or the likes, but felt that one needs a Common Lisp library for "small" operations, while "large" operations can be offloaded to python libraries through py4cl/2.
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Good Lisp libraries for math
If performance is absolutely not a concern, then third option is using python libraries through py4cl/2. To put it differently, if calling python from lisp is not the bottleneck, then this is a feasible option.
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Why Hy?
I encourage people to try out Common Lisp because, unlike with Hy, you will get: speed, ability to build binaries, truly interactive image-based development (yes, more interactive than ipython), more static type checks, more language features (no closures in Hy last time I checked), language stability… To reach to Python libs, you have https://github.com/bendudson/py4cl My comparison of Python and CL: https://lisp-journey.gitlab.io/pythonvslisp/
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Tutorial Series to learn Common Lisp quickly
> Not sure if such a thing already exists for CL
couple of solutions exist for this
https://github.com/bendudson/py4cl
https://github.com/pinterface/burgled-batteries
- Calling Python from Common Lisp
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(define (uwu) (display "nya~\n"))
Ahh, makes sense. Well, if you ever wanna steal some of python's thunder, libpython-clj worked great for me lol. Supposedly py4cl fills a similar role in Common Lisp.
What are some alternatives?
raylib - A simple and easy-to-use library to enjoy videogames programming
py4cl2 - Call python from Common Lisp
ulubis - A Wayland compositor written in Common Lisp
magicl - Matrix Algebra proGrams In Common Lisp.
Panda3D - Powerful, mature open-source cross-platform game engine for Python and C++, developed by Disney and CMU
cl-cuda - Cl-cuda is a library to use NVIDIA CUDA in Common Lisp programs.
trivial-gamekit - Simple framework for making 2D games
hy - A dialect of Lisp that's embedded in Python
cffi - The Common Foreign Function Interface
libpython-clj - Python bindings for Clojure
magnum - Lightweight and modular C++11 graphics middleware for games and data visualization
coalton - Coalton is an efficient, statically typed functional programming language that supercharges Common Lisp.