A.W. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

    I don't have a problem working with Javascript, but I've
    seen a few projects out there, some compilers from
    Scheme to JS, some implementations of Scheme IN
    Javascript and so on. This got me curious if perhaps
    more Emacs users/elisp devs would be interested if
    working in a Lisp was an option. I don't think it should
    be anything but that: an option. perhaps the scheme code
    could be treated as a string and passed to the parser
    (in JS) and then run natively? Wow, I'm impressed with
    how close that is to making sense. Me So Smart.  This
    might have already been considered, and I just don't
    know why it's not feasible, so feel free to tell me if
    that is so.

I asked about this a couple months ago as I recall.  The
answer was, in effect, Javascript is easy to learn, so just
suck it up.  So I admit that while I use and like Conkeror,
I don't customize it at all, because I'm just a poor
end-user, and elisp was hard enough to learn.  If there was
even a limited scheme-to-js module built in to Conkeror, I'd
almost certainly use it.

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