My apologies, the title got cut off. It should be:

"Is it possible in theory to write/modify a Clojure compiler that
doesn't resolve Java references?"

On Aug 28, 12:50 pm, Luke VanderHart <luke.vanderh...@gmail.com>
wrote:
> For the past week or two, I've been investigating what it would take
> to write something that would allow *.clj  and *.java files to
> seamlessly compile together, such that they could be freely intermixed
> in a project. I knew it was a difficult problem, but I think the
> adoption benefits would be substantial, and the benefits huge for
> those stuck in Java-land at work.
>
> My conclusion (and *please* tell me if I'm missing something) is,
> unfortunately, that the problem requires full compiler support from
> both ends. Either a new compiler needs to be written that can compile
> both Clojure and Java, or the existing Java/Clojure compilers need
> some fairly extensive patching to make this possible, to share a
> dependency graph and symbol tables.
>
> The exception would be if it were possible to simply "pass through"
> class references when compiling *.clj files to *.class files, and not
> resolve them until run-time (or perhaps a seperate "resolution" phase
> of the compile process, for more compile-time safety). I realize this
> can't be done for dependencies between Clojure source files, since
> macro definitions are required at compile time. But is there any
> reason you couldn't do this for Java references from Clojure files?
>
> Then, it'd be very easy - just compile all the Clojure, put the
> classes in the classpath, and compile the Java.
>
> Any thoughts?

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