• spesk@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    Common Lisp!

    It can be a little esoteric if you don’t have experience with the paradigms, but I’ve never used a language that felt more free.

    On SBCL you have typing support, CLOS provides an OO interface, and it lends itself well to functional style programming (despite not having a type system as powerful as say Haskell). Additionally, the ecosystem is quite stable and mature, any library of functionality you might need is likely available.

    • custom_situation
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      1 year ago

      functional dev environments have been the hardest part of learning cl for me. i don’t really want to use emacs, but it’s the wild west for other editors.

      setting up emacs wasnt hard per se, but emacs is just so much. i spent more time troubleshooting how to use emacs and fix issues with it than learning the language, which just makes it all a little lame.

      • spesk@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        I’ll agree the emacs on ramp is widely regarded as a barrier to entry on CL. I’ve heard good things about the Alive plug-in for vs code though. Also stuff like emacs4cl and portacle in theory make it easier, but I don’t disagree.

        With that said, using an editor built on a lisp to work on lisp as its advantages if you can get over that initial hurdle.