yeah Janet looks interesting, I found some neat projects in my scheme hunt. Carp and Ferret are also pretty cool if you haven't stumbled on them. Carp is a no-GC lisp for realtime work, and Ferret is a clojure-like lisp for running on MCUs.
And I do understand your perspective too, obviously we all should be able to work on projects however works for us, and supporting wider user expectations is without doubt, extra work. Thanks for listening at any rate. Thinking about this a bit more, it might make sense for me to publish my work as something-on-s7, so that I can, at the least, make it clear to potential beginner users (of which I expect to have many) to keep their questions to the something-on-s7 forums and so on. I expect to include macros intended as gateway-drugs for new users coming from Clojure, Elixir, and Racket too, so a layer on top of S7 will be likely and I expect it will be of no interest to advanced schemers. I'm exploring good ways to write docs such it is easy to flip between "in core S7", "in standard r5rs scheme" and "this is in the something-on-s7 layer". Interesting thing about Janet: that really nice site was written in Mendoza, in Janet. It's a static site generation package by the author of Janet, and available online. I think I'll be giving it a try! And boy, do I wish I could have been at Stanford with you and Andy in those days! His stories of it are amazing. :-) On Mon, Jan 13, 2020 at 9:34 AM <[email protected]> wrote: > Thanks for the pointer to Janet -- an interesting take on > Lisp, with some surprising similarities to s7. > > I'm sure you're right about the admin side of things, but > it's not my personality, or something -- in my formative > years, I had shoulder-length hair and went bare-foot, > and all my friends were pot-smoking hippies on motorcycles. > > “Bliss it was in that dawn to be alive > But to be young was very heaven.” > > >
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