At Fri, 09 Oct 2020 15:04:37 -0600, Jonathan Godbout said:
> Are people interested in having a meeting?
Yes, definitely!
> Can anyone give a talk?
I can, though it wouldn't strictly be about Lisp. My employer (osohq.com)
has been developing a logic programming language (i.e., a Prolog dialect)
focused on authorization problems, and I think both the language and its
implementation might be of interest. We've written an embeddable interpreter
in Rust that communicates via FFI to a host or application language
such as (currently) Python, Ruby, JavaScript, Java, or Rust. It has
some features inspired by Common Lisp (e.g., multiple dispatch),
but mostly it's a logic language with unification & backtracking.
Its distinguishing feature is its ability to write rules over objects
and types from the host language; e.g., whatever models an application
uses natively. We think this is useful in certain complex authorization
contexts, and perhaps more broadly.
I would in particular love to get feedback from a Lisp crowd on the
language design, syntax, etc. We tried to give it an updated feel,
but still be recognizably Prolog, and just a little Lispy. Lisp
folks tend to have pretty high standards and strong opinions on
all kinds of languages, so it'd be great to hear what people think.
> I'd be willing to give a lightning talk about cl-protobufs.
+1
> We can use Zoom instead of hangouts...
+1 from me on reliability and ease of use, though I totally understand
issues people may have with it. Jitsi's probably fine, though I have
not ever used it.
-- Alex