tungsten
Petalisp
tungsten | Petalisp | |
---|---|---|
1 | 17 | |
28 | 445 | |
- | - | |
8.7 | 8.5 | |
25 days ago | 9 days ago | |
Common Lisp | Common Lisp | |
ISC License | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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tungsten
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Common Lisp Implementations in 2023
But no one is stopping you from building a "full modern standard library". I am doing just that with https://github.com/galdor/tungsten. Of course it would be nice to have a large company do all the work as it is the case for Go, but it is not going to happen. As always, you either do the work yourself or pay someone to do it.
The specification is limited, no doubt about that, but I am convinced that any modernization effort would end up in a huge mess with everyone trying to inject their own preferences from the languages they already know with no regard for the spirit of the original specification.
Petalisp
- Petalisp: Elegant High Performance Computing
- Is there a tutorial for automatic differentiation with petalisp?
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Is there a language with lisp syntax but C semantics?
While not "as fast as C" (C is not the absolute pinnacle of performance), Common Lisp is incredibly fast compared to the majority of programming languages around today. There is even a huge amount of ongoing work being done to make it faster still. We are seeing many interesting projects that make better use of the hardware in your computer (e.g. https://github.com/marcoheisig/Petalisp).
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Common Lisp Implementations in 2023
i think lisp-stat library is actually being developed. however one numerical cl library that doesnt get enough mention and is being constantly developed is petalisp for HPC
https://github.com/marcoheisig/Petalisp
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numericals - Performance of NumPy with the goodness of Common Lisp
However, if you have a lisp library that puts those semantics to use, then you could get it to employ magicl/ext-blas and cl-bmas to speed it up. (petalisp looks relevant, but I lack the background to compare it with APL.)
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New Lisp-Stat Release
> his means cl pagckages can be "done".
this is true if there is nothing functional that can be added to a package. however its very much not true for ml frameworks right now. new things are being added all the time in the field. however even in the package i linked you have the necessary ingredients for any deep learning model: cuda and back propagation. the other person mentioned convolution which i think is pretty trivial to implement but still, if you expect everything for you to be ready made then you should probably stick to tf and pytorch. if you want to explore the cutting edge and push the boundaries then i think common lisp is a good tool. as an aside it might also be interesting to note that a common lisp package (Petalisp) is being used for high performance computing by a german university
https://github.com/marcoheisig/Petalisp
- The Julia language has a number of correctness flaws
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When a young programmer who has been using C for several years is convinced that C is the best possible programming language and that people who don't prefer it just haven't use it enough, what is the best argument for Lisp vs C, given that they're already convinced in favor of C?
One trick is that Common Lisp can generate and compile code at runtime, whereas static languages typically do not have a compiler available at runtime. This lets you make your own lazy person's JIT/staged compiler, which is useful if some part of the problem is not known at compile-time. Such an approach has been used at least for array munging, type munging and regular expression munging.
What are some alternatives?
ql-https - HTTPS support for Quicklisp via curl
awesome-cl - A curated list of awesome Common Lisp frameworks, libraries and other shiny stuff.
quicklisp-client - Quicklisp client.
JWM - Cross-platform window management and OS integration library for Java
cl-cuda - Cl-cuda is a library to use NVIDIA CUDA in Common Lisp programs.
magicl - Matrix Algebra proGrams In Common Lisp.
lish - Lisp Shell
StatsBase.jl - Basic statistics for Julia
Optimization.jl - Mathematical Optimization in Julia. Local, global, gradient-based and derivative-free. Linear, Quadratic, Convex, Mixed-Integer, and Nonlinear Optimization in one simple, fast, and differentiable interface.
criterium - Benchmarking library for clojure
numcl - Numpy clone in Common Lisp
one-more-re-nightmare - A fast regular expression compiler in Common Lisp