typedclojure
orchestra
typedclojure | orchestra | |
---|---|---|
5 | 1 | |
443 | 618 | |
2.0% | - | |
9.2 | 10.0 | |
11 days ago | over 3 years 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.
typedclojure
-
Does Go Have Subtyping?
...and Typed Racket is a really powerful type system (see refinement types[4]). So, I thought it's just a matter of time for Clojure to get to that level of power and support. It should be much easier to do this to Clojure than to Ruby, given that you have a working example of how to do it well. So I'm really surprised Clojure isn't gradually typed by now, with most of the code being annotated and type-checked at compile time.
[1] https://github.com/clojure/core.typed
[2] https://github.com/typedclojure/typedclojure
[3] https://github.com/typedclojure/typedclojure/blob/main/examp...
[4] https://docs.racket-lang.org/ts-reference/Experimental_Featu...
-
What is most in need in Clojure open-source ecosystem?
you mean with typedclojure?
- Questions about Rich Hickey's comments on static types
-
What is it like to write a large project in a dynamically-typed language?
I'm talking about the fact that a particular dynamic language has it, whether some people use it or not is moot. https://github.com/typedclojure/typedclojure is the successor to the erstwhile popular core.typed library, and normal Clojure itself allows for type annotations to (potentially) help improve performance.
-
Tour of our 250k line Clojure codebase
Seeing that there is a need for type checking in Clojure. Has anyone used https://github.com/typedclojure/typedclojure in production?
orchestra
-
Questions about Rich Hickey's comments on static types
That said, I still think Clojure would be stronger with some kind of static checking. When working in hairier pieces of code, I tend to use orchestra to instrument my functions as a sort of crude type checking. It's not static and it's not foolproof, but it's better than nothing. I'm very much excited by the new frontiers Typescript has opened up in structural static type checking, and I'm hopeful that type theory researchers will come up with something one day that's a better fit for Clojure. Alas, we do not yet live in that future.
What are some alternatives?
missionary - A functional effect and streaming system for Clojure/Script
schema-inference - Schema Inference of Malli Schemas
integrant - Micro-framework for data-driven architecture
clip - Light structure and support for dependency injection
jank - A Clojure dialect hosted on LLVM with native C++ interop
coc-clojure - coc.nvim plugin for clojure-lsp
webfx - A JavaFX application transpiler. Write your Web Application in JavaFX and WebFX will transpile it in pure JS.
ruby-lint - Moved to https://gitlab.com/yorickpeterse/ruby-lint
timbre - Pure Clojure/Script logging library
coc.nvim - Nodejs extension host for vim & neovim, load extensions like VSCode and host language servers.
clojure-data-cookbook - A book about how to do common data manipulation, analysis, and visualization tasks in Clojure