Thanks for the interesting thread. I was considering using clim for an experimental openGL application I'm writing, but I didn't get too far with it (on Darwin platform). So, I'm using OpenGL and GLU only for now. See link below for more details. Since I'm at a point where I need some high-level UI gadgets like pop-menus and things, it would be nice to fit what I have into a lisp framework, since the toplevel of what I have is written in lisp (image proceessing stuff is in C++).
http://kevinmichaelsmith.posterous.com/
I'm interesting in learning more about the benefits of clim and if that could work with an openGL canvas using mac backend for UI look and feel.
On Nov 19, 2010 8:21pm, Craig Lanning CraigL@sc.rr.com wrote:
On Sat, 2010-11-20 at 01:10 +0000, James Ashley wrote:
Hi, all.
I've been programming for close to 30 years now, and I've been trying
to find a good excuse to really learn common lisp (as opposed to just
dabbling) for the past 3 or so.
I've been programming in Lisp (first Zetalisp on a lisp machine, then
Common Lisp on Unix, Windows, and Linux) professionally for 25 years and
I find it to be the best language for just about anything.
I think I've finally come across a project that feels like the right
"fit." The basic idea is a collaborative 3-d client-side application
server with a built-in IDE that persists the state off all its
applications between all its program runs.
You need to be aware that CLIM doesn't have any 3D concepts in it so you
will need to add those abstractions. The good thing is that CLIM is
layered so if there are no high level facilities that do what you need,
you can build them up from the lower level facilities.
This is total vaporware at the moment...I'm just trying to do some
basic research and pick the right tools. I've been involved in way too
many where we started out in one environment, got a proof of concept,
then realized there were some fundamental limitations that kept us
from moving forward, so we essentially had to start over from scratch
(or wound up layering ever-more-unmaintainable pieces on top of an
unsustainable architecture).
Right now, I'm thinking off "applications" being developed on at least
4 different levels. One would be raw common lisp, that interacts
directly with the "interpreter." Another would really be creating
custom frame managers (I think...I'm just scratching CLIM's surface)
to provide eye candy effects (since I'm planning on targeting the
masses, I've learned that it's pretty much all about the eye candy).
Yet another would be something like the HTML/CSS/Javascript paradigm
to create 2-d "applications." And the last would be the actual 3-d
world where the users interact.
A combination of Open Cobalt and World Forge seemed like the "proper"
mix at first. But, the more I dug into smalltalk, the less impressed I
was. I kept thinking "If only I could write a macro to do all this..."
The more I dug into it, the more I realized just how big and ambitious
this project is.
One thing I've found is that I can build applications much faster in
Common Lisp and they are much more robust. You may find that as you
become more proficient in CL that your project doesn't take as long as
you thought.
If I'm going to be dedicating 10 years (or more) to
something, and forcing my users to download some obscure runtime
anyway...why not go with a language that left my jaw on the floor and
my head spinning? I realize common lisp isn't perfect, but what is?
(Clojure's tempting. I downloaded it, spent about 20 minutes to get a
REPL, and finally gave up. It may be mature and "ready for the big
leagues" before this project is, but...common lisp's there now.
Racket's similarly tempting, but I just don't seem to fit with the
Scheme community).
I currently use SBCL as my free CL of choice and LispWorks as my
commercial CL of choice.
The ideas behind McClim seem to feel like it's the right "fit" for the
GUI part of the project. Not all the eye-candy pieces, of course.
Just...conceptually. I've been digging my way through the old mailing
list archives (the check-in comments are a lot more educational than I
realized at first. I'm glad they got archived that way), and I see
that there's been speculation about an OpenGL backend for ages now
(and at least an experimental stab at writing one).
Conventional wisdom seems to dictate using something like one of the
GTK bindings for the UI. But it seems to me that, if I started there,
I'd just wind up re-implementing tons of CLIM to get to an abstraction
level where I could forget about that and get down to real work. It
seems to me that my time would be better spent helping get the GTKairo
working solidly.
It's interesting that you should mention "re-implementing tons of CLIM".
I have watched (mostly) and participated (a little) in the development
of XEmacs for many years. As they discussed the various target user
intefaces (Win32, GTK, etc.), I noticed that they were implementing
parts of CLIM in C.
Actually, one of the nice things about using CL and CLIM is that you get
to define your UI separately from the implementation, thus, allowing you
to more easily port your application to more systems. CLIM can have
multiple backends: GTK, OpenGL, Win32, XLib, etc.
Either way, I'll wind up duplicating the work to switch to some crazy
gadget set built entirely on some 3-d engine or other.
I see one of the fundamental programs being a traditional "form
builder" kind of drag-and-drop thing along the lines of VB. Probably
with some kind of tree view (or maybe boxes) to hide the fact that the
code's actually being written in lisp.
Am I barking up the wrong tree? Like I said...I've been going through
the old mailing list archives. I've normally have wrapped that up and
at least gotten more than a passing acquaintance with actually writing
McCLIM code (at this point, I'm just digesting that ancient CLIM
"walk-through" referenced first on the home page) before de-lurking.
But I ran across someone else today who seems to be thinking on at
least vaguely parallel lines to mine, and I figured this was the best
place to check before I wasted his time with my ideas.
I say go for it. I haven't found a project yet that I wouldn't rather
do in Lisp.
Craig
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