Start building on Google Cloud with $300 in free credits. No commitment, no credit card required until you're ready to scale.
Launch your next project with $300 in free Google Cloud credits—no strings attached. Test, build, and deploy without risk. Use your credits across the entire Google Cloud platform to find what works best for your needs. After your credits are used, continue with always-free tier services. Only pay when you're ready to scale. Sign up in minutes and start exploring.
Start Free Trial
Error to trace to log to deploy. One click. No SSH.
Catch the cause before the pager goes off.
AppSignal links every error to the trace, the trace to the log, the log to the deploy that shipped it.
CLISP is a portable ANSI Common Lisp implementation and development environment by Bruno Haible. Interpreter, compiler, debugger, CLOS, MOP, FFI, Unicode, sockets, CLX. UI in English, German, French, Spanish, Dutch, Russian, and Danish.
Autotoolset is both a colection of small tools (scripts, emacs macros, etc.) to simplify project development with autoconf/automake/libtool/texinfo/emacs and a good documentation on how to get started on these tools and the whole GNU software model.
...Working so far:
* Automatic precise garbage collector.
* Procedural macros.
* Computer algebra library
* A bunch of useful primitives.
* A fairly small, but useful standard library.
In the PSP build, the following additional features are available:
* Some primitives for graphics on the PSP.
---
The PSP has no decent hot-swappable coding language, and it can't multi-task. Therefore, this interpreter supports Emacs-like multi-tasking on the PSP. See: Several frames+windows each running their own lisp program from a single core.
With up to 25k MAUs and unlimited Okta connections, our Free Plan lets you focus on what you do best—building great apps.
You asked, we delivered! Auth0 is excited to expand our Free and Paid plans to include more options so you can focus on building, deploying, and scaling applications without having to worry about your security. Auth0 now, thank yourself later.
RSLisp is a new dialect of Lisp which works on the NET Framework with a special compilation/interpretation model. If you wish you can download the source and build it yourself for Linux (requires Mono Framework), but I don't promise that it'll work
Little b is a Lisp-based language which allows scientists to build shareable, reusable mathematical models of complex systems based on shared parts. The initial focus is molecular and multicellular networks.
Project web page: http://www.littleb.org
ACDK - Artefaktur Component Development Kit - is a platform independent C++-framework similar to Java or C#/.NET for generating distributed and scriptable components and applications.
Albert is a doc-generator for Common Lisp, comparable to Javadoc and Doxygen. Currently it generates DocBook documentation. It reads an ASDF system definition and documents the system.
elmake is a way to provide makefiles for elisp packages (for emacs) which are processed completely in Elisp (no external autoconf, make etc. required). For info files, an external makeinfo is suggested, as elisp parsing of info files is slow.
Stop Cyber Threats with VM-Series Next-Gen Firewall on Azure
Native application identity and user-based security for your Azure cloud
Gain integrated visibility across all traffic in a single pass. Deploy Palo Alto Networks VM-Series to determine application identity and content while automating security policy updates via rich APIs.
osi: Examples for creating software written in C++ that uses GTK+2.0 (Win32 and Linux). Build environment: GNU autotools with g++; MSVC --- boolmin: A Boolean Minimizer for Win32, Linux, UNIX --- emacs: XEmacs extensions designed to work on many machines
An emacs site-lisp setup that provides a useful package of non-standard emacs lisp extensions, extends the jde mode, adds menu commands for folding mode, buffers associated with the frames they came from and a site-start.el and default.el
ELCO stands for Embedded Lisp COmpiler or Esdens Lisp COmpiler. The goal is to create a lisp compiler for embedded 32bit architectures. (i.e. ARM) With this compiler you are able to write lisp code on a naked chip. No OS needed.