Oops, sorry.  Appears as though I misunderstood your question, thinking “console” was also a reference to the REPL.

 

I’ve grown so used to ‘dumping’ forms from the Editor buffer into the Listener, it never occurred to me I might want to go in the other direction as well.  I’ll try looking further into this for LW.

 

BC

 

 

 

From: Aleksandar Matijaca [mailto:amatijaca@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, October 07, 2010 10:08 AM
To: toronto-lisp@common-lisp.net
Subject: Re: [toronto-lisp] Fwd: Development helpers

 

Since doit-3 "lives" inside the vm via Repl , it seems logical that somehow one should be able to "dump it" to file or to the console etc. Copy into a clipboard would be good too. 

Sent from my iPhone


On 2010-10-07, at 9:58, Brian Connoy <BConnoy@morrisonhershfield.com> wrote:

Hi Aleksandar!

 

Like Paul, I can only speak for LispWorks.  While working in the Listener, the “History Search” command can be invoked with ALT+R.  In the minibuffer you will be able to enter ‘doit-3’ and press enter.  The DEFUN for ‘doit-3’ will appear at the prompt.

 

Perhaps there is something similar in other environments?

 

Cheers,

Brian Connoy

 

 

p.s.   Sorry, I didn’t get to meet you at the last meet.

 

 

 

From: Aleksandar Matijaca [mailto:amatijaca@gmail.com]
Sent: Wednesday, October 06, 2010 10:48 PM
To: toronto-lisp@common-lisp.net
Subject: [toronto-lisp] Fwd: Development helpers

 



Hi there,

 

first of all Paul and Dave, thanks for replying!!  The question can perhaps be best explained

with an example:

 

repl=> (defun doit-3 (x) 

(* 3 x))

repl=> '(some more cool stuff)

repl=>'(and more and more)

 

i keep testing and playing around with functions

more and more

 

I can certainly run my doit-3 function

 

repl=>(doit-3 4)

12

repl=>

 

and now, I say to myself, - how the heck did I write that doit-3, I forgot, because,

I wrote it 20 minutes ago, it obviously exists inside REPL because I can execute it...

So, how do I view [dump??] the contents of doit-3 to the screen, or to a file on the

disk, so I can invoke an editor and modify doit-3 and then reload it??

 

I am just interested in learning how to be more productive in a standard software

development cycle.

 

Thanks, Alex.

 

 

 

On Wed, Oct 6, 2010 at 4:59 PM, Paul Tarvydas <tarvydas@visualframeworksinc.com> wrote:

> Hi there,
>
> A bit of a noob question - let's say that I have an interactive Repl
> session that has been going on for about an hour or so, and all of a
> sudden I wish to modify a defun I wrote a while ago. What is the
> easiest way first to show that code on the console, modify it, and
> load it back into Repl ?
>
> I am just trying to come up with a comfortable development environment
> for myself.

There is something called "(dribble)" which records a transcript of your session.  I've never used it.

With LW, I typically use the editor to type into a file (buffer) and compile-load the buffer, or ^E one form or defun.  Undo can get you back to an earlier state.  I find that if I'm experimenting, I do it a function at a time, until I'm happy with it, so I never have to go back a full hour.

I take it that most free lisp users use emacs+slime.  You split the emacs window into two, one half shows your edit buffer, the other shows a lisp interaction.  A keystroke sends your current form to the interaction and you see the result in the interaction buffer.

pt

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