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Apr 29 04:29 UTC

Mine, a Coalton and Common Lisp IDE (coalton-lang.github.io)

111 points|by Jach||6 comments|Read full story on coalton-lang.github.io

Comments (6)

6 shown
  1. 1. yenko||context
    from https://coalton-lang.github.io/20260424-mine/

    > mine is different in that it’s supposed to be as easy as the QBASIC or the Borland Turbo products of yore, but for Coalton and Common Lisp

    Woah this is awesome. I'm too young to have used them but I'm fascinated with the idea of Borland Turbo Pascal, QuickBasic. Glad there is a lisp option now ;)

  2. 2. Jach||context
    Discussion from yesterday: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47903173

    (I submitted this the day before but I guess this is HN's second-chance feature kicking in.)

  3. 3. giancarlostoro||context
    There were a few Lisp editors a few years back Light Table was one and I forget there was another one but seems they were eventually discontinued. Those editors were kind of nice, they even showed you what every shortcut available could do visually the moment you held down the Control key.
  4. 4. dismalaf||context
    Lem for Common Lisp is still active. Plus Emacs has always been around. And Racket's built in editor... I do miss Light Table though, it was very nice.
  5. 5. kjs3||context
    Maybe enumerate what was good about Light Table in case the author of Mine is looking for suggestions for improvement.
  6. 6. dismalaf||context
    I mean, it was easy to set up, easy to use, the side pane showed the result of every expression and it was pretty. I'm guessing it fell by the wayside since Emacs and Neovim both have great Lisp plugins plus are easily scriptable.