After my initial post, I found the very idea I suggesting for firefox,
but with a twist.

A web 2.0 OS expirement that has a lot of potential
-YouOS
http://news.com.com/2061-12572_3-6091895.html?part=rss&tag=6091895&subj=news

The actual Site
https://www.youos.com/

No LISP yet, but within 3 secs I installed on the web based OS
-Try Scheme 0.1 by Jason Orendorff

I am now playing in scheme with no unix / windows issues and I am able
to just play with some examples.  Very unpowerful, but still this is
the gold standard of plug and play should be.  Now if we could get
ANSI common Lisp in YouOS, could have some real fun.  Who is up for a
port?


On 7/1/06, LeAnthony Mathews <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> My I suggest that we create a Firefox LISP IDE that anyone can
> download then hook to whatever compiler they want.  The firefox
> plug-in would have editor with syntax coloring and code completion.  A
> interaction pane with the LISP process outside Firefox( or inside
> firefox which is a whole other project). The simplicity of download
> and "play" would help people just play with lisp.
>
> Some links
> Creating Firefox extensions
> http://roachfiend.com/archives/2004/12/08/how-to-create-firefox-extensions/
>
> FireLISP or FoxyLISP
>
> On 7/1/06, Jeremy Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > arnuld wrote:
> > >
> > > hello all,
> > >
> > > i have also put this one on http://wiki.alu.org/Gardeners_Projects
> > > under discussion list but i am putting it here for comments:
> > >
> > > tell me whether you liked the idea or not? BUT make sure you 1st check
> > > www.DrScheme.org.
> >
> > My problem with DrScheme (I used it at University for Scheme) is that
> > it's all in one big memory-hogging blob. I used it as a
> > bracket-highlighting editor for Clisp in Windows, but I found that it
> > was hogging 90mb of memory! So now I use Nedit, and CLisp in a console
> > window.
> >
> > I do use an IDE for C++ quite heavily, but here's my argument against
> > one for Lisp: You don't need it. You can set breakpoints in the code
> > with break and single-step, trace, and view variables and even run
> > functions/code from the REPL. I only wish Visual Studio had one.
> >
> > But then again, I wasn't too keen on SLIME with EMACS (EMACS's speed is
> > like working with an old teletype) and so I don't know the benefits vs
> > using Clisp from the console.
> >
> > Cheers,
> >
> > Jeremy.
> > _______________________________________________
> > Gardeners mailing list
> > [email protected]
> > http://www.lispniks.com/mailman/listinfo/gardeners
> >
>
>
> --
> LeAnthony Mathews
> Nurse Manager Pediatric Critical Care
> University of Mississippi Medical Center
>


-- 
LeAnthony Mathews
Nurse Manager Pediatric Critical Care
University of Mississippi Medical Center
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