6:07:53Beepyp0a, maybe pipe the 1 line into an HTML formatter so you can read it.
6:09:35BeepyAnyone know where to submit a patch for SBCL?
6:10:36p0aBeepy: another issue is that I am not sure how to extract the important information
6:11:04p0aFor example, I've noticed that the news articles have an attribute in <a> that other links don't have, but in general it is pretty cumbersome to extract exactly what I need every time
6:18:40BeepyYou can throw all of the quickload stuff into a list '(:drakma :plump ...)
6:18:40p0aso it's pretty silly in what it does but the use is... you type (news) to get the frontpage news for the subreddits in the global var, and then you type (myread "worldnews") to read the titles of worldnews
6:22:53p0awell anyhow, thanks for the advice! I'll keep working on this some other time
6:25:14MichaelRaskinp0a: maybe look whether something like closure-css could be useful — you might be able to find someone who has written CSS selectors for that, and also Reddit's own CSS might be a hint. In general, data extraction from HTML has some amount of inherent (unless you control the other side…) complexity.
6:54:35beizhiaAnyone have any recommendations for a tool to set up a common lisp project?
6:55:09beizhiaI see cl-project, quickproject, and eazy-project on quicklisp
6:56:30beizhiathat's what I'm trying to use, but failing somewhat >_<
6:57:23beizhiajust trying to rig a single file and a some unit tests for it
6:59:46Beepybeizhia, what problem are you running into?
7:02:00beizhiawell tbh, I dont really know where to begin. Should I make a separate asdf package for my tests? And do I need to symlink my project's dir in ~/common_lisp so asdf will find it?
7:03:13beizhiaI think I might just be a bit spoiled by languages that set up the project structure for you, somewhat new to non-emacs lisp too. I just cant figure out what the normal thing to do it.