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22:06:30
jmercouris
anyone know of any attempts to create a 'visual' programming interface for lisp?
22:07:08
jmercouris
of course it would be a new language, but borrowing as many concepts from lisp as possible
22:07:19
jmercouris
I'm imagining for example, someone has a defun block they can drop in
22:07:26
jmercouris
and then they can nest in other operations in that defun block
22:07:33
jmercouris
and instead of parens, things would just be indentation levels
22:08:31
jmercouris
I got some pretty awful images from the search engine assuming I meant fracture
22:08:43
moon-child
sorry, this https://github.com/disconcision/fructure
22:09:41
jmercouris
yeah, this is pretty close to what I was imagining
22:10:12
jmercouris
I want a really simple interface for users to make little subroutines
22:10:15
jmercouris
without having to learn lisp
22:10:59
jmercouris
this looks really intense, I think I could tone it down and provide some of the same concepts more approachable for beginners
22:11:20
jmercouris
thanks for the link moon-child
22:43:07
zephyr
jmercouris blockly is a related thing, web based but possibly informative
22:44:02
hendursaga
jmercouris: blockly is pretty good, although you'd want to wrap it some, it's pretty old JS
22:47:18
luis
There's one such library where you can switch between text and blocks seamlessly. I forget its name
22:49:22
luis
https://github.com/droplet-editor/droplet is it
23:54:07
phantomics
Hey jmercouris, my Seed project kind of fits that bill
23:54:29
phantomics
It's been on hold awaiting a rebuild of the interface generation system
3:04:59
beach
Good morning everyone!
3:39:30
Lord_of_Life_
** NICK Lord_of_Life
7:42:00
beach
rdrg109: Do you have any particular reason for using GNU CLISP over other implementations?