Ha, I've been reviewing Emacs's Lisp implementation since they've incorporated a native code representation and come back to Larceny as my reference point for compiler design. It looks like Lars has done more recent work, but still fairly dormant.
https://github.com/lars-t-hansen/larceny Lynn On Sun, Jun 26, 2022, 1:37 PM David Rush <kumoy...@gmail.com> wrote: > So...I've been running Larceny 1.3 for quite a while now, and I use it > regularly, if in admittedly casual circumstances (a lot of music theory > calculation and occasional serious algorithmic prototyping). Today, I found > some outright bugs in the SRFI-1 implementations of the lset-* algorithms > and I thought I'd check to see if there was a new release up before I said > anything. Then I noticed that there have been no updates in five years. > > Now Larceny has never had a very high release cadence, but five years does > seem like rather a long time. And the Github statistics also show > little-to-no activity for most of that same time. So is Larceny dead? > Abandoned? > > I do notice that there are several forks, but are any of these a successor > project? Do I need to start porting my personal tool kit?...Just so many > questions... > > david > -- > GPG Public key at http://cyber-rush.org/drr/gpg-public-key.txt > _______________________________________________ > Larceny-users mailing list > Larceny-users@lists.ccs.neu.edu > https://lists.ccs.neu.edu/bin/listinfo/larceny-users >
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