So to summarize it seems that one of you uses drip, a couple think it's a 
non-issue, and the rest want to design a new system.

I take this to mean that there's no widely accepted solution.

I don't/won't use emacs so nREPL.el is out for me. I use vim, so it's most 
natural for me to have some kind of separate command-line tool.
Really, I just want `lein run` to be faster. Can someone explain where all 
this time is spent?
I hear a lot of talk of compiling, but why would we re-compile things where 
none of the dependencies have changed?

On Wednesday, February 20, 2013 8:38:10 AM UTC-8, Michael Klishin wrote:
>
>
> 2013/2/20 Buck Golemon <workit...@gmail.com <javascript:>>
>
>> Can I use lein1 and expect the various clojure libraries and templates to 
>> work?
>
>
> lein1 is no longer supported. It is a much better idea to move to lein2 
> and 
> use drip or nREPL-based tools such as nREPL.el.
>
> -- 
> MK
>
> http://github.com/michaelklishin
> http://twitter.com/michaelklishin
>  

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