Today's Common Lisp applications in action.
Check it out: Kandria is open-source and published on Steam.
https://kandria.com/
LispWorks is an implementation and a Common Lisp editor, built (and extensible) in Common Lisp, with its multi-platform GUI framework. It is proprietary and comes with a free and limited version.
Lem is a general purpose editor built, and extensible, in Common Lisp. A modern editor of the Emacs tradition.
It supports many programming languages, with LSP, tree-sitter, interactive markdown, HTML, JS and CSS, it has a file browser, a terminal, project-related commands, an interactive Git interface, org-mode support is upcoming, and more.
It comes with a ncurses and a webview interface.
https://lem-project.github.io/
Neomacs is a structural Lisp IDE / browser / computing environment. It builds on Electron.
https://github.com/neomacs-project/neomacs
ICL, Interactive Common Lisp, is a new enhanced REPL with loads of features.
https://github.com/atgreen/icl/
(all editors with CL support: https://lispcookbook.github.io/cl-cookbook/editor-support.html)
more companies: https://github.com/azzamsa/awesome-lisp-companies/
libraries: https://awesome-cl.com/
Learn Common Lisp! https://github.com/vindarel/common-lisp-course-in-videos/
"Please don't assume Lisp is only useful for Animation and Graphics, AI, Bioinformatics, B2B and Ecommerce, Data Mining, EDA/Semiconductor applications, Expert Systems, Finance, Intelligent Agents, Knowledge Management, Mechanical CAD, Modeling and Simulation, Natural Language, Optimization, Research, Risk Analysis, Scheduling, Telecom, and Web Authoring just because these are the only things they happened to list."
Kent Pitman
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