Welcome to Glitzersachen ════════════════════════ Blog Articles ───────────── [Fediverse comments] (2024-04-03) Orxite now supports comments via the fediverse and Glitzersachen has them. This is an alternative for /Commento/ or /Disqus/. [A note on shell coding conventions: Variables] *(2024-03-26)* I recently got asked how the naming conventions of shell variables were. I was wrong. [Running Orxite 2 now] *(2024-03-14)* Orxite 2 has reached feature parity with Orxite 1. The Glitzersachen web site is now generated by Orxite 2. [The Lisp diaries, issue 2] (2023-04-05) Developing CL-TEST. An emacs interface for CL-TEST. Testing with eight /Common Lisp/ implementations. And problems loading NAMED-READTABLES with MKCL. [Romulan now supports CLIs without sub-commands] Romulan acquires the functionality to define command line interfaces without subcommands. [Releasing Romulan 1.0.0 (first release)] I am hereby releasing the first version (1.0.0) of /Romulan/. The source is available on [Gitlab] and on [Github]. The primary site is, for the moment, Gitlab. /Romulan/ is a declarative interface for the Common Lisp command line parser /[clingon]/. [Releasing Sbcl-Script 1.0.1 (first release)] I am hereby releasing the first version (1.0.1) of [sbcl-script]. The source is available [on Gitlab] and [on Github]. The primary site is, for the moment, Gitlab. Sbcl-Script is not a big thing, just a tiny script written in [Steel Bank Common Lisp] which can be used in a /hash-bang/ line to run a common lisp script. [Releasing Orxite 1.0.1 (first release)] I've released Orxite — my static site generator based on [Emacs] and [Org-Mode] — as already promised [three days ago]. The source is available [on Gitlab] and [on Github]. The primary site is, for the moment, Gitlab. [Blogging with Emacs, Org-Mode, Make and Lisp] This blog is a static web-site. For the last year I have been using [Hugo] to build the HTML-pages, but I have become more and more dissatisfied with the results for various reasons. My solution was, to roll my own [static site generator] using Lisp as templating language, [Gnu Make] to control the translation in an extensible way and with [Org-Mode] sources as first class citizens. [The Lisp diaries, issue 1] Some months ago I started learning Common Lisp, strictly privately, though, since my day job has no use for Lisp. Some very basic ideas where I want to go with Lisp. [Releasing cl-simple-utils 1.0.0 (my first Common Lisp package)] Today I have released my first Common Lisp package: [cl-simple-utils], version [1.0.0]. [Fediverse comments] See file blog/2024-04-03-fediverse-comments.org [A note on shell coding conventions: Variables] See file blog/2024-03-26-a-note-on-shell-coding-conventions-variables.org [Running Orxite 2 now] See file blog/2024-03-24-running-orxite-2-now.org [The Lisp diaries, issue 2] See file blog/2023-07-17_lisp-diaries-issue-2.org [Romulan now supports CLIs without sub-commands] See file blog/2023-04-30_romulan-1.1.1.org [Releasing Romulan 1.0.0 (first release)] See file blog/2023-04-16_romulan-1.0.0.org [Gitlab] [Github] [clingon] [Releasing Sbcl-Script 1.0.1 (first release)] See file blog/2023-04-09_sbcl-script-1.0.1.org [sbcl-script] [on Gitlab] [on Github] [Steel Bank Common Lisp] [Releasing Orxite 1.0.1 (first release)] See file blog/2023-04-05_orxite-1.0.1.org [Emacs] [Org-Mode] [three days ago] <~/my/glitzersachen2022/blog/2023-04-02_blogging-with-emacs-make-lisp.org> [on Gitlab] [on Github] [Blogging with Emacs, Org-Mode, Make and Lisp] See file blog/2023-04-02_blogging-with-emacs-make-lisp.org [Hugo] [static site generator] [Gnu Make] [The Lisp diaries, issue 1] See file blog/2023-03-05_lisp-diaries-issue-1.org [Releasing cl-simple-utils 1.0.0 (my first Common Lisp package)] See file blog/2023-02-12_cl-simple-utils-1.0.0.org [cl-simple-utils] <./blog/2023-02-12_cl-simple-utils-1.0.0.org> [1.0.0]