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Monday, 29th of May 2017, 15:52:17 UTC
17:22:36
attila_lendvai1
** NICK attila_lendvai
17:33:33
flip214
beach: pretty pretty PLEASE, please have that included with phoe's CLUS...
17:33:51
flip214
a.k.a. "oh no, another fragmented CL document" ;)
17:57:57
paule32
is it possible, to inject code into lisp, so e.g. i can create strange projects
17:58:15
paule32
i give the user the possible to work with 0 and 1
17:58:49
paule32
the user can now use this bits, and create a component
17:59:45
paule32
the result is, the computer emulate him self
17:59:57
paule32
ok, ver utopical, but possible?
18:07:20
paule32
how does it shown in a smart console program?
18:07:58
whoman
macros from top to bottom. its how lisp is built anyway, so just remake it ?
18:59:41
pjb
paule32: check reader macros.
19:00:06
pjb
paule32: try: #.(progn (print 'hi) 42)
19:00:50
pjb
paule32: try: (progn (write-string "Enter an integer: ") (force-output) (read)) RET #.(progn (print 'hi) 42) RET
19:20:01
mhd
meta: do we have a common lisp eval bot?
19:21:41
mhd
on this channel, ala clojurebot on #clojure?
19:25:13
paule32
the only thing here i can see, that the progn command execute the list - or better sayed: the commands in the list
19:26:31
paule32
or would this apply to "read" a textfile with commands, that stream is then exec
19:27:34
paule32
so, the scope is like you start a bash in a bash
19:27:47
paule32
each derivate from the parent
19:28:12
paule32
this intend to the second line
19:28:41
paule32
write string, then flush strem buffer, read
19:29:02
paule32
and then exit the scope to execute scope 3
19:40:12
paule32
or do i not understand it?
21:03:22
pjb
paule32: RET = RETURN Obviously, you had to enter the two forms separately!
21:12:40
paule32
(progn (write-string "Enter integer: ") (force-output)(read))
21:15:20
dim
damn I know have a rosettacode account :)
21:15:58
dim
let's stop the computer for the day before I get drawned too much into that thing...
22:13:09
pjb
paule32: the problem seems to be that you are not working with a REPL. This is highly inhabitual. You won't be benefiting to the fullest from lisp, if you go on like that.
22:14:09
pjb
paule32: type exactly, at a shell: clisp -q -ansi -norc RET (progn (write-string "Enter an integer: ") (force-output) (read)) RET #.(progn (print 'hi) 42) RET
22:26:21
ebrasca
** NICK ebrasca-searchin
22:27:07
ebrasca-searchin
** NICK ebrasca-find
22:27:21
ebrasca-find
** NICK ebrasca-finding
22:32:09
ebrasca-finding
** NICK ebrasca
2:28:59
axion
Does anyone have any resources on how to use CI/git hooks/asdf test-op to run test suites on commit etc? This idea seems very interesting to me for a large math project of mine, but I have only briefly heard of it before.
Tuesday, 30th of May 2017, 3:52:17 UTC