I thought it was also but it appears to be used in place
of string, which I thought was odd. I'll look again.
Thanks for the answers.
On 1/4/2011 11:38 AM, Robert McIntyre wrote:
the #"" is a reader macro for regexes.
hope that helps,
--Robert McIntyre
On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 11:18 AM, Tim Daly<d...@axiom-developer.org> wrote:
The latest version of clojure.pamphlet can build Clojure
directly from the book. It dynamically builds the source
tree from the book, runs tests, creates the pdf, and
starts the REPL.
At least in theory. I am stuck with running a couple
tests. The only real change I've made to the sources
is to make it fit a printable page which involves
changing a line to make it shorter.
I've run into a syntax for strings that I don't understand.
The string #"some string" is used in the test files. The
documentation on the reader does not list this as a possible
input case. What does it mean?
Once I cross this hurdle everything else works and I can
post a new version for your experiments.
Tim
On 1/4/2011 10:49 AM, Hubert Iwaniuk wrote:
I would say start here:
http://orgmode.org/worg/org-contrib/babel/languages/ob-doc-clojure.html
Cheers,
Hubert
On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 4:12 PM, Robert McIntyre<r...@mit.edu> wrote:
Just discovered org-mode myself --- does anyone know of guide to using
it with clojure for a total newbie?
sincerely,
--Robert McIntyre
On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 9:57 AM, Hubert Iwaniuk<neo...@kungfoo.pl> wrote:
Hi Seth,
Yes I did play with org-mode + babel for clojure.
It works great :-)
Just make sure you are using latest and greatest of org-mode.
Cheers,
Hubert.
On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 3:34 PM, Seth<wbu...@gmail.com> wrote:
have you guys checked out org-mode + babel for emacs? This would be an
excellent place to start to do literate programming. Interesting
ideas ... maybe i will try this in my own code ...
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