jackdaniel changed the topic of #lisp to: Common Lisp, the #1=(programmable . #1#) programming language | <http://cliki.net/> <https://irclog.tymoon.eu/freenode/%23lisp> <https://irclog.whitequark.org/lisp> <http://ccl.clozure.com/irc-logs/lisp/> | SBCL 1.5.4, CMUCL 21b, ECL 16.1.3, CCL 1.11.5, ABCL 1.5.0
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<PuercoPop> fouric: not w/o modifications but none of them are a road-blocker
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<black_13> is there a constant in lisp such as #t ?
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<edgar-rft> black_13: in Common Lisp it's just simply t (without the #)
<black_13> an s-expression is not necessarily correct lisp
<black_13> i ask
<edgar-rft> it's true, an s-expression is not necessarily correct lisp, but what exactly is the question?
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<black_13> i am toying around with writting a s-expression parser
<black_13> i want to make tree based on s-expressions
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<beach> Good morning everyone!
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<ck_> Good morning, beach
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<beach> black_13: What is the purpose of your S-expression parser, and why do you need to write one?
<beach> black_13: The reason I am asking is that Common Lisp comes with a built-in S-expression parser. It is called READ.
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<dtornabene> good morning
<LdBeth> Hello dtornabene
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<dtornabene> hello LdBeth
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<no-defun-allowed> Silly question: when quickloading something, what do all the dots signify (other than looking nice)?
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<jackdaniel> I think it is bound to a macroexpand-hook so each macroexpansion shows a dot
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<no-defun-allowed> Ah yeah, I was guessing something like each top level form, but that seems easier to track.
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<jmercouris> interesting......
<minion> jmercouris, memo from pjb: You need a reader macro, you cannot do it with a macro (because then you won't need what symbols were qualified). You cannot use #. because you need the input stream; when loading or compiling a file, *standard-input* is not set to the source stream!
<minion> jmercouris, memo from pjb: https://pastebin.com/qJTUxwYc (note: !?{}[] as (dispatching) reader macros are reserved for the user, so don't use them in code published in quicklisp)..
<jmercouris> oh, I see
<no-defun-allowed> Yep, does seem to be like that. I wrote a little system that just prints out the macroexpand-hook and it is in quicklisp-client::macroexpand-progress-fun
<LdBeth> Well, I guess one can just copy the readtable
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<Xach> no-defun-allowed: it's meant as a primitive quiet indicator of progress.
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<Xach> no-defun-allowed: no output at all for minutes could be alarming - has something failed?
<Xach> but the full output of sbcl i find too much most of the time
<no-defun-allowed> Xach: It does that very well, but I was wondering what each dot "means".
<Xach> it means something is happening
<Xach> i don't think much more can be drawn from each one
<no-defun-allowed> Right then.
<no-defun-allowed> Can you eyeball it and say something like "that system has a lot of dots, it's pretty big"?
<LdBeth> It could be something just emitted “function FOO is compiled”
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<no-defun-allowed> (I ask since I loaded up CLIM, which loaded flexichain, and it scared the crap out of me because I intend to refactor it, and it put a lot of dots.)
<LdBeth> So it can also be “unused variable p”
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<pfdietz> The quicklisp macroexpand hook also prints the package name when a defpackage form is encountered, when a file being compiled.
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<ck_> it would be fun to make this into a complexity measurement
<ck_> quick, write the paper! "On Extending Software Metrics: Beyond Cyclometric Complexity. The Quicklisp-Dot"
<ck_> now if you would excuse me, I have to tackle this 512-dot problem
<pfdietz> There was an effort once to connect software complexity metrics to bug count. As I recall, the only interesting correlation was with code size.
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<warweasle> Hi
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<beach> Hello warweasle.
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<warweasle> I've become the "the lisp guy". Every time a "new" idea shows up on /r/programming...I mention how lisp had it decades ago. Apparently they hate lisp there.
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<beach> No doubt because they know very little about it. That's the usual reason.
<jmercouris> I think fundamentally a huge barrier to Lisp's adoption is indeed the absence of a GUI toolkit
<jmercouris> at least a free toolkit
<jmercouris> web frameworks exist, then again, Python doesn't have a good GUI toolkit, and it has proliferated like crazy
<jmercouris> so that is not a good reason, maybe it is marketing...
<warweasle> What I wouldn't give for something between emacs and unreal engine.
<warweasle> With common lisp. Elisp never clicked for me.
<p_l> jmercouris: Python put *a shitton* into docs
<jmercouris> Elisp is a disease in the Lisp community
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<p_l> jmercouris: looking back in time, Python ~2002 gave people the equivalent of paying for boxed set of MCL or Genera back in 1990, in the form of attached docs
<p_l> not in quality of environment or anything else
<p_l> but in the "the box comes with three-ring binders / books full of docs, a self-guide tutorial, and a good enough set of basic libs"
<warweasle> It's such a same considering lisp is so nice.
<beach> jmercouris: I don't believe for a second that the existence of a GUI toolkit for Common Lisp would have any significant impact on its adoption. Strong psychological forces are at work here, and a GUI toolkit can't compensate for those.
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<mason> Eh? No GUI toolkit? What about Smoke/Qt?
<p_l> beach: *some* psychological forces, yes
<beach> jmercouris: The easiest thing to do is to stop desiring more widespread adoption. I am convinced there is nothing we can do as Common Lisp developers to change it. It would have to be changed in university education, and even that may be too late.
<p_l> beach: it's easier to target new people, though
<p_l> beach: I'd say availability of a *complete* environment, one where people actually worked to keep that completeness, would drive a lot. But all such projects are expensive
<beach> p_l: I seriously doubt it. I have studied the psychological forces involved and I have a pretty good understanding of their force.
<warweasle> A good gui would help a lot.
<mason> What's wrong with CommonQT?
<p_l> warweasle: "good" is not enough. You'd need to get something akin to Delphi experience
<p_l> beach: do you have any writeup?
<beach> I do.
<beach> Hold on a sec...
<warweasle> Some of those that work forces, are the same that write python.
<beach> mason: The semantic gap between a language such as Common Lisp and a language such as C++ is so great that debugging becomes complicated and it influences in negative ways the programming style.
<p_l> mason: have you ever used Delphi?
<warweasle> p_l: Lisp will mutate to that. That's its best ability. To modify itself to become better.
<mason> beach: Alright, so something native from the ground up is the goal then...
<mason> p_l: I haven't.
<warweasle> Until then I just ECL and then translate everything to C in the end.
<p_l> warweasle: I heard MCL was a step-down from Delphi when it regards GUI. And it was goddamn good for lisp environment
<beach> p_l: metamodular.com/Essays/psychology.html
<p_l> beach: thank you
<beach> mason: Some people are working very hard as we speak to make it happen.
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<warweasle> beach: Which thing?
<beach> "something native from the ground up"
<mfiano> Interesting McCLIM hasn't been brought up, being as powerful as it is and local to Common Lisp.
<p_l> this reminds me that I need to look up if Garnet is operable
<beach> mason: It is already usable, but it has some of the same problems as Common Lisp itself, in that it requires people to change the way they have traditionally worked.
<aindilis> what about more articles in places like GNU/Linux Journal?
<aindilis> oops srry about the GNU, auto added
<p_l> aindilis: that assumes people read them
<p_l> different world today
<warweasle> beach: I think we need to start thinking in new ways. Like why is my text editor, language and compiler all separate?
<p_l> aindilis: the kind of people that read actually insightful technical press is already the 1%
<beach> warweasle: That is being dealt with as well, but resources are scarce.
<aindilis> warweasle: well you probably don't want to rule out their use of other programming languages, right?
<warweasle> Imagine being able to make a C function, test it in your editor with some lisp and slowly create your project that way.
<jackdaniel> warweasle: I've made a hack "eclrepl" for that
<p_l> warweasle: play around with Pharo
<jackdaniel> it requries more work of course, but it works for interactive testing C functions
<warweasle> jackdaniel: I did something similar...but it's weird that emacs is a completely separate piece.
<jackdaniel> I have even implemented c99 grammar, but I've stopped at the preprocessor
<jackdaniel> and scymtym took it and actually parsed stdio with success, what is a huge "wow", because C preprocessor is a mess
<warweasle> There is that new fancy compiler. but it's been a while since I've looked into it.
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<jackdaniel> (he first written the preprocessor part which my implementation was missing)
<mason> beach: Well. That's good to hear, though. :)
<jackdaniel> and regarding CLIM, we are moving forward with determination and stable progress
<mason> beach: Public project? Or not until it's complete?
<beach> warweasle: There are plans for an IDE with a very capable text-editor part that can analyze Common Lisp code in ways that are currently not possible, with a real debugger in which you can set breakpoints even in code that is itself executed by the debugger.
<aindilis> what about a marketing campaign?
<p_l> unfortunately some of the best options for that are these days mostly clojure
<beach> warweasle: And an inspector that blows the SLIME inspector out of the water.
<mfiano> I prefer the SLy inspector using "stickers" for debugging
<beach> The inspector already exists, in fact.
<aindilis> what about making the Common Lisp static/dynamic analysis stuff a separate API that can be accessed by multiple editors?
<mfiano> It would have to be better than stickers for me to switch. That blows SLIME debugging out of the water
<aindilis> such as Emacs/SLIME
<beach> mason: You have to be patient about some initial version.
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<beach> aindilis: That is being worked on as well.
<beach> I forget the name of the interface, CLI maybe?
<beach> But that interface can't handle everything we need for Common Lisp.
<scymtym> beach: you mean language server protocol (LSP)?
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<aindilis> ha!
<beach> Ah, yes, thanks.
<aindilis> I was trying to remember that
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<beach> To analyze the contents of a text-editor window, we need to do several things that aren't possible (or at least not simple) with current Common Lisp implementations.
<mfiano> Yes, LSP alone wouldn't be enough for Common Lisp. You would also need the DAP protocol, and additional editor specific functionality since LSP is not really suitable for interactive languages. Once you start adding editor specific functionality though, you no longer have what makes LSP useful - portability.
<beach> First, we need to read the code, preserving the source information.
<beach> Then we need a compiler that can handle incremental first-class environments, so that we can back out side effects when the code changes.
<beach> But that is being worked on as well. :) In fact, most of such a compiler already exist.
<aindilis> is there any documentation central for CL?
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<Xach> aindilis: no
<ck_> there's a couple of documentation aggregators
<beach> And that compiler has sophisticated CLOS protocols that makes it possible to adapt to several implementation. We just need the manpower to make it happen. Or alternatively, significantly more time.
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<warweasle> If only I had the money to give lisp a boost. Like unreal did to blender.
<beach> warweasle: Money is not the problem. Manpower is.
<p_l> aindilis: Xach's l1sp.org been pretty useful for me
<p_l> beach: money can be turned into manpower, though
<beach> p_l: Not as easily as one might think. Not for this kind of work.
<LdBeth> Hire Lispers?
<warweasle> I think there are enough lispers already...We just don't work together well.
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<p_l> beach: I'd say fifty/fifty. The problem is that it's non-trivial amount of money, and some of the skills necessary are kinda low availability on the market due to general IT stupidity
<beach> LdBeth: Most of the work I need done requires someone who is an expert in CLOS, in compiler design, and in software engineering, I am sure there are Lispers out there that correspond to that list of requirements, but they are very likely employed, have families, houses, friends, etc.
<warweasle> p_l: I agree with you. I have to use ECL as a sort of scaffolding to develop C and C++.
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<mfiano> It's non-trivial to have a central documentation repository that doesn't just scrape docstrings. Quickdocs for example doesn't include #'(setf documentation) documentation. A near-complete solution can only be realized at compile time. Heck, #'documentation is a generic function and could change according to the local environment or at runtime.
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<warweasle> Also, lisp has security issues.
<p_l> for general CL betterment, there's a ton of ancilliary work that is unrelated to advanced programming itself
<warweasle> I would love to see a safe subset of lisp.
<Xach> i excerpted from a book on the topic here https://www.xach.com/lisp/security/
<p_l> warweasle: what kind of security are you thinking about?
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<beach> warweasle: That is being worked on as well.
<p_l> the likes of SPARK are special dialects of their host languages for a reason
<warweasle> p_l: Imagine a subset of lisp that you could use like javascript.
<beach> warweasle: See out paper on first-class global environments. Also see the WSCL project.
<p_l> warweasle: that's absolutely a downslide in security
<warweasle> With maybe a (with-safe-code ....)
<p_l> warweasle: falls under DSL/small-language work
<p_l> and implementing lisp in lisp
<p_l> hell, you'd probably get mostly there by copy-pasting Norvig's Scheme implementation
<warweasle> p_l: Yes, but it's deceptively tricky to write safe code.
<beach> So if anyone wants to take a chunk of this effort, that would be great.
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<p_l> it was more of a backhanded answer that there was zero security in what you mentioned
<mfiano> You would need to write your own reader and also takes some of the idea's from beach's paper to secure it.
<warweasle> beach: What exactly are you working on?
<LdBeth> mfiano: one has to assume there’s a period of time the system is stable and documents can be retrieved
<beach> warweasle: SICL, Cleavir, McCLIM a bit, WSCL, Clordane, Second Climacs.
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<warweasle> beach: I wish I had time to help on something. But I'm trying to start something for myself.
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<beach> warweasle: Oh, I fully understand. I am just explaining why progress is slow.
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<aindilis> I have omega number of projects going on, and omega + 1 = omega, so it wouldn't be any more work for me
<beach> aindilis: Yes, exactly the same for others.
<beach> It is getting better though. Several people are pitching in.
<beach> But, let me say this again, even when we have something decent, it won't have any significant impact on the number of people using Common Lisp.
<aindilis> beach is there anything that would?
<aindilis> I suppose you must mention a strategy in your writeup?
<mfiano> LdBeth: Correct. Any solution for fetching documentation is a partial one though. To be complete it has to be pushed by the author to a central repository, not the other way around, in order to better deal with foreign dependencies not available on the central repository, etc.
<beach> aindilis: Only a deep transformation about what is taught at universities. And that's not going to happen because the teachers an insufficiently trained as well.
<aindilis> I do have a text -> concordance wiki system I wrote that could aggregate links to mentions things like SICL, Cleavir, McCLIM a bit, WSCL, Clordane, Second Climacs, etc into a Wiki, maybe even google them for additional mentions, and then disambiguation of multiple denotations?
<LdBeth> mfiano: it seems a distributed system could help
<aindilis> also is there a conference, a foundation and an author index?
<warweasle> beach: I had an idea using an sexp-based diff tool to create something similar to git. We could build documentation, annotations, etc into the system.
<warweasle> As a bonus, this system could be used as an editing tool...like the heart of a distributed text editor.
<LdBeth> warweasle: data structure diff
<warweasle> YEs. But sexp aware.
<warweasle> With comments.
<aindilis> warweasle: git is insufficient? replicating something as complex as git would be difficult I would think
<LdBeth> But sexp is not very ideal once reader macros are involved
<aindilis> it would be cool to have an index of who has what projects, and to see where people are aligned and could team up
<warweasle> Git is just diff and patch with hashing. This would allow you to create documents within documents.
<warweasle> It could also use encryption to allow different levels of access.
<warweasle> So I could let you work on a part of my project but see the rest.
* LdBeth git actually works for its author
<LdBeth> But might not suit everyone
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<aindilis> I worked on a now defunct project called POSI to coordinate what people were working on by having them list their goals, and coordinate to achieve them: https://frdcsa.org/~andrewdo/writings/flourish-2009.odp
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<aindilis> the main innovation was using RTE (recognizing textual entailment) / NLI (natural language inference) to figure out which goals were identifical
<aindilis> *identical
<warweasle> My end idea was to use "safe-lisp", this sexp-database/revision mangager interface and some gui tools to create new applications based on your data. As you need them.
<LdBeth> warweasle: seems you misunderstand some concept that distributed VC uses
<warweasle> You need a spreadsheet? It's just a bunch of tiny rich text boxes...
<beach> warweasle: Such a diff tool sounds quite useful.
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<warweasle> I might still have it...
<aindilis> is QuickLisp the closest thing to CPAN?
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<LdBeth> aindilis: yes
<Xach> aindilis: and yet still so far away
<LdBeth> warweasle: you’ve mentioned safe-lisp, what’s the standard to be “safe”?
<warweasle> I think I lost it.
<aindilis> damn
<dlowe> these days the standard to be safe is to not access memory or branch :p
<warweasle> LdBeth: Similar to basic javascript. It can't interact with anything outside itself. Unless you plug in something like a DOM or some other connection.
<warweasle> Anyway, it was just a recursive diff function. But I couldn't figure out how to work with comments.
<mfiano> warweasle: You need more than that to be safe.
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<warweasle> I could apply a "diff" command which was just a list of what to change in a tree.
<aindilis> I keep a large Knowledge Base in Cyc of people on IRC and what they're working on...
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<warweasle> mfiano: I meant to use it like javascript. But in a 2D AND 3D world.
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<aindilis> beach: do you think better organization is critical to the expansion or at least mantainence of the community?
<mfiano> Quite easy to bring the whole image down, just by reading it something like 1d999
<mfiano> it=in
<warweasle> End the end I wanted to create a single application which could replace all others.
<LdBeth> warweasle: I had similar plans on diff, but I choose a “flat” representation instead of trees(or linked list), and comments can be preserved well even they’re multiline
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<mfiano> Safe input can't be parsed by cl:read
<beach> aindilis: I think the community is doing quite well, and it appears to be adding a few people regularly. What I think we ought to do, but it is hard to obtain, is to factor more work so as to avoid duplicate effort.
<LdBeth> Although diff is not my first concern, the intention is to be compact and share as much as possible
<warweasle> The basic idea is there are only a few "basic" interaction types. Text, rich text, vector graphics, etc. But embedding them into complex documents, you don't need new apps anymore. The app will form around your data.
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<aindilis> that's good to hear the community is doing well
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<aindilis> Lisp is critical to the success of my main interest, symbolic AI
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<LdBeth> beach: persuading others is a hard social process
<aindilis> I'm interested in learning how to persuade others both for the sake of lisp and other similar ecosystems I rely on but mostly since my project for the last 20 years has had no new members
<warweasle> I wish I had the time to rip into Godot and pull it into lisp.
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<beach> aindilis: Given what I now know about the psychological forces behind this issue, I think you can basically forget about persuading others to change their ways.
<aindilis> beach: you can't persuade me to
<aindilis> j/k
<aindilis> yeah that's my conclusion
<LdBeth> Show them what lisp can do
<beach> LdBeth: Won't work.
<aindilis> I have two printouts on my wall: "Slow and steady wins the race", and "Show people something that works"
<Xach> You must simply live with the smug pleasure of being correct in a sea of ignorance!
<Xach> that is worth more than gold
<warweasle> Xach: I would rather exchange it for gold.
<aindilis> :) is there any shared hosting that I can use to host some lisp related infrastructure work? I lost 9 hard drives last year and that's my main deterent from working more on these things?
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<warweasle> I use linode.
<Xach> warweasle: that is, how you say, trop gauche
<Xach> aindilis: i use ovh and a dedicated server and i like it.
<beach> aindilis, LdBeth: Most people who need convincing have a very long-term investment in something significantly different. They are often experts in their group, and enjoy a lot of prestige.
<beach> When they are confronted with the possibility that their investment was the wrong one, they react by denying that possibility. They may even use ridicule and even stronger tactics to avoid that anyone in their group may want to test the better thing.
<beach> If not, they may risk losing the prestige. This is not a conscious reaction. They basically can't help it. They firmly believe that they are right and that the person trying to persuade them is totally wrong.
<warweasle> Xach: Are you speaking in French again? I don't like it when the voices in my head do it either.
<aindilis> beach: ah
<warweasle> Stoopid voices...always thinking they are better than me.
<LdBeth> Principle no.1 don’t judge a book by its cover
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<aindilis> one thing that could be done is iterate over ghtorrent extracting the urls of projects that list Lisp as their primary language
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<aindilis> and then you could use NLP text classification to classify the projects into preexisting folksonomies like debtags or sourceforge's classification
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<aindilis> it might be nice to have such services be language agnostic
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<beach> aindilis: For example, I just saw a recent paper by Adams on reading and writing floating-point numbers. There have been work in the past, but this one claims to be much better. Now every Common Lisp implementation needs those routines.
<beach> But you can be sure that most implementations use their own code, perhaps their own technique as well, and possibly even a technique that is not as good as the published ones.
<aindilis> is that the one about using upper and lower bounds?
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<beach> So taking those articles, writing portable Common Lisp code with the techniques, comparing them and making the code available, would make it possible for many Common Lisp implementations to use this code and avoid duplicate maintenance.
<beach> I haven't read the latest one yet.
<aindilis> so what the catch with writing portable CL code here?
<beach> Ryũ: Fast Floating-to-String Conversion, by Ulf Adams (Google Germany).
<beach> No catch. It is just that it is likely that every implementation has its own.
<beach> The reason I am suggesting this one is that I don't think there is a catch.
<aindilis> ah, now I understand, with the number of different versions of CL out there, you have this problem. I come from Perl originally so we didn't have that problem
<aindilis> are there any versions of CL that are kind of iconoclasts?
<aindilis> that break the standards?
<aindilis> or do things their own way for the most part
<aindilis> for instance, I heard it can be hard to get things running on SWI-Prolog to run on other Prolog, another language which has this kind of fractionalization
<beach> They all have their specificities, but something like reading and writing floating-point is typically done in portable Common Lisp code.
<beach> CLISP is written in C and uses a bytecode interpreter which makes it very portable but not that fast. ECL compiles to C and interoperates with C very easily. SBCL generates fast native code, CCL has a fast compiler. Clasp interoperates with C++. etc etc.
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<aindilis> yeah that belongs in documentation central
<aindilis> but then you have this problem: https://xkcd.com/927/
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<beach> That is definitely a risk.
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<beach> The only way I see to fix that problem is to make sure that the new thing is faster, more portable, better documented, better tested.
<aindilis> or maybe just have the new thing be an index of the others
<aindilis> like one big set of wiki disambiguation pages
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<pjb> I have an idea, let's write what we work on in a ~/.plan file, and let's the finger command fetch and dump this file…
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<ck_> hold on not so fast I need to copy this down -- "let's ... the finger ... command fetch and dump the file" ok got it
<ck_> will proceed with this plan but I will make a feint to the north-east first I'll surround them
<pjb> aindilis: there's the notion of conformance in CL. This is stronger than portable. Portable, is only a potential. conforming is definitive.
<pjb> aindilis: If you write conforming code, then it is guaranteed that it will run the same in all conforming implementations. No work to do, no porting of portABLE code, or whatever.
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<Xach> My cron job failed last night, but not to worry, it's because a lightning storm knocked out power. time to get another ups...
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<beach> Wow.
<ck_> There's also a 'major github outage' going on at the moment
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<Xach> It wasn't me.
<Xach> My cron job did not run as previously mentioned.
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<ck_> Xach: I just read your conversation with a scammer. Wonder why they're all called Solomon.
<ck_> also I managed a straight face, but when war was beginning, I lost it.
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<ck_> ah, good news -- githubstatus.com says 'error rates have dropped'. I guess the levees are holding.
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<decent-username> Hi, does someone of you know how I could disable the quoting behaviour of paredit in Emacs? Right now when I type a backslash character it will quote the next key stroke, but I just want a simple backslash character.
<decent-username> > . <
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<ck_> take a look at the keymap
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<ck_> decent-username: \ is probably bound to paredit-backslash. Bind it to self-insert-command or remove the binding to get the behaviour you're looking for
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<Xach> decent-username: C-q \ will insert a backslash.
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<decent-username> thank god.
<Xach> Deleting it will trigger some pareditness too though.
<decent-username> o . O
<Xach> C-q <anything> will insert that thing rather than going through fanciness, it's a generic emacs feature.
<decent-username> I'm not an elisp hacker, so I have no clue how to rebind keys. I just started writing some function for the paredit mode hook.
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<ck_> decent-username: (define-key paredit-mode-map (kdb "\\") nil)
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<decent-username> thanks ck_
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<decent-username> *packages*
<decent-username> whoops
<decent-username> that's not a REPL
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<Oladon_work> No packages found.
<Oladon_work> >
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<aeth> decent-username: IRC can be a REPL if you want
<aeth> We don't have a bot in here that runs CL, though.
<Xach> I am thankful for that.
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<Guest5703> What are the origin of the word obarray? and what does it stand for?
<Xach> Guest5703: there's no obarray concept in common lisp.
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<Guest5703> I'm wondering where it comes from, there seem to be references outside emacs lisp.
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<housel> Maclisp did have obarrays http://www.maclisp.info/pitmanual/symbol.html
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<housel> It's just an array of canonical object instances
<housel> CL more or less extended that idea into packages
<Guest5703> I'm the one asking about obarray, sorry for Guest5703.
<zhlyg> Gah, wrong terminal again.. did obarray provide a mechanism for symbol specialization?
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<zhlyg> (like emacs SEEM to do, not sure about that)
<housel> It was a pretty unsophisticated table used for implementing INTERN
<Guest5703> housel: wow, opposite of INTERN was REMOB, wonder when it became MAKUNBOUND.
<housel> MAKUNBOUND is different (it's also listed on that page)
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<zhlyg> housel: yes of-course, the symbols value vs its reachability/existence. Anyhow, thanks for the link. Those pre-CL lisps really seems to be the origin of the obarray concept.
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<zhlyg> Interesting style, is it to get temporary reachability of the special symbol X? (LET ((X ...)) ... (MAKUNBOUND 'X) ...) ;bad style
<housel> https://www.dreamsongs.com/Files/HOPL2-Uncut.pdf page 12 says that before 1971 it was a list (and thus OBLIST)
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<zhlyg> housel: wow! thanks for digging that up! So the name is most probably a short for object-array.
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