The latest PS interprets QUOTE of a symbol to mean, "first convert this symbol to a Javascript identifier, then a string". This breaks our code, because our formula parser relies on symbols to represent operators. Here's a line of code that PS was generating for us nicely before:

(defparameter *op-symbols* '(| | + - * / ^ < > = <> <= >= & % ! { } [ ] |(| |)| |:| |,| |"| |'|))
=>
var OPSYMBOLS = [' ', '+', '-', '*', '/', '^', '<', '>', '=', '<>', '<=', '>=', '&', '%', '!', '{', '}', '[', ']', '(', ')', ':', ',', '"', '\''];

In the new PS, it looks like this:

var OPSYMBOLS = [' ', 'plus', '', 'star', 'slash', '^', '<', '>', 'equals', '<>', '<equals', '>equals', '&', 'percent', 'bang', '{', '}', '[', ']', '(', ')', 'colon', ',', '"', '\''];

I think this is a mistake. The only reason for translating symbols like + to "plus" is if you want to use them in a JS identifier. But quoted symbols are not meant to turn into JS identifiers, only JS strings.

Looking at the git log, this change was introduced into special-forms.lisp by commit dd4442b8973fe8b2c19b44f94f244934aa418ae8. This was submitted at the time as a bug fix. From our point of view, this "fix" introduces a bug, and quite a serious one, since it means we can't run our formula parser (and a few other things) in the browser.

Daniel