·@tempinbox.com wrote:
> does any one know about merits of croma
>
> the english student patricks award winning lisp dialect for webdev
I've tried to avoid saying much about it until there's some actual code
to show; anyone can just _talk_ about a new language. (Also, for the
record, I'm Irish.)
> is it as good as web.py and ror /django
That's certainly in the eye of the beholder. At the very least, Croma
is quite different.
> where can i download it
It hasn't been released yet.
> google search gives a wikipedia page but details are sketchy
>
> lisp is the blue pill
Damn straight!
···············@gmail.com wrote:
> ·@tempinbox.com wrote:
> > google search gives a wikipedia page but details are sketchy
> >
> > lisp is the blue pill
>
> Damn straight!
Hang on, I knew that felt strange. I think Lisp is actually the red
pill. (Unless you learned to read with The Little Schemer, in which
case, I suppose, the pill might be considered blue).
a <·@tempinbox.com> wrote:
> Common Lisp web framework
> I wanted to find out which framework you suggest or a general set of
> tools to start working on LISP
>
Depends on your background and how much you want to do different.
:-)
A good starting point could be mod_lisp + TBNL.
<http://weitz.de/tbnl/>
(Can be used standalone in the time you're just playing with it.)
--
Web (en): http://www.no-spoon.de/ -*- Web (de): http://www.frell.de/
···············@gmail.com schrieb:
> ···············@gmail.com wrote:
> > ·@tempinbox.com wrote:
> > > google search gives a wikipedia page but details are sketchy
> > > lisp is the blue pill
> > Damn straight!
> Hang on, I knew that felt strange. I think Lisp is actually the red
> pill. (Unless you learned to read with The Little Schemer, in which
> case, I suppose, the pill might be considered blue).
No. Lisp looks green. It can be the red or/and the blue.
:)
lin8080 wrote:
> ···············@gmail.com schrieb:
> > ···············@gmail.com wrote:
> > > ·@tempinbox.com wrote:
> > > > google search gives a wikipedia page but details are sketchy
>
> > > > lisp is the blue pill
>
> > > Damn straight!
>
> > Hang on, I knew that felt strange. I think Lisp is actually the red
> > pill. (Unless you learned to read with The Little Schemer, in which
> > case, I suppose, the pill might be considered blue).
>
> No. Lisp looks green. It can be the red or/and the blue.
> :)
It's not a pill, it's a ball of mud ...
http://www.bath.ac.uk/~masjap/TYL/history.html
···············@gmail.com wrote:
> ·@tempinbox.com wrote:
> > does any one know about merits of croma
> I've tried to avoid saying much about it until there's some actual code
> to show; anyone can just _talk_ about a new language.
...as many do!
How did you win whatever-award-it-was without any actual code?
According to the blog post I read at lemon-something or other, he did
have some code to show. It apparently beat php (which I don't find hard
to believe). It would be nice to see a few examples of code even if we
can't eval it heh.
········@gmail.com wrote:
> ···············@gmail.com wrote:
> > ·@tempinbox.com wrote:
> > > does any one know about merits of croma
> > I've tried to avoid saying much about it until there's some actual code
> > to show; anyone can just _talk_ about a new language.
>
> ...as many do!
>
> How did you win whatever-award-it-was without any actual code?