21:39:04jmercourisI'm talking about within the realm of realistically possible for a single programmer to achieve
21:39:15NilbyBut the coolest way it to run C as Lisp like Genera did.
21:39:25moon-childplenty of people have written their own OSes
21:40:27moon-childNilby: that's what mezzano does. (Well, it compiles llvm to cl, i think)
21:41:08NilbyRight. I think that's the nicest way for Lisp to call C, since then you can use the Lisp debugger and tools.
21:44:44NilbyI think the free Lisps could do a better job of making calling C safe. The commerical Lisps seem to do better.
21:50:26moon-childI think there was another c compiler written in lisp. Not sure how much progress it had made. The mezzano thing I know was mature enough to run quake
22:03:05Nilbymoon-child: maybe you're thinking of https://github.com/vsedach/Vacietis
22:08:00moon-childI think that was it. Given some of the TODO items, it looks less far along than I thought
1:30:12pjbOf course, if there's no swank server listening, the only solution would be to do a gdb attach to the frozen emacs process, and to try to locate and use the socket connected to the image.
1:42:54Josh_2pjb: I will do that, I have been meaning to create a deploy system for this. Lesson learned
2:13:10Josh_2I export a macro called 'pkv' from my main package and in a sub package, I use this macro extensively, this package has (use <main package>) in its defpackage, why am I getting an error telling me that pkv isn't defined?
2:14:53no-defun-allowedStupid question, use or :use?
2:54:11White_Flamesingle-colon, and it says it's exported?
2:54:31Bikeand it actually exists? (macro-function 'pkv) in mm-module.jitsi returns something?
2:55:40White_Flameif you just C-c C-c an expression, instead of C-c C-k'ing the entire file, it might not have actually run the in-package. I've hit that on simple files