If you want a dead easy way to get up and messing around with Clojure
on Windows, I'd definitely recommend "Clojure Box".  It's a relatively
recent build of Clojure integrated with Emacs, SLIME, and everything
else you need.  Pretty much click on it and go.

"Clojure Box, alpha" thread:
http://groups.google.com/group/clojure/browse_frm/thread/6fd17fb97f058192/7331afc652ba83c3


Mark.

On Nov 29, 9:58 pm, puzzler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Nov 29, 5:39 pm, Randall R Schulz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > On Saturday 29 November 2008 17:28, puzzler wrote:
> > SLIME is an Emacs-based development environment for programming Lisp
> > under Emacs (technically, "The Superior Lisp Interaction Mode for
> > Emacs"). You might want to check out "Like Slime, for Vim":
> > <http://technotales.wordpress.com/2007/10/03/like-slime-for-vim/>.
>
> That article makes Slime sound pretty good.  Still seems a bit tricky
> to get emacs/slime/clojure up and running on windows.  Any step-by-
> step instructions would be appreciated.
>
> --Mark
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