Hi all,

I was planning to wait a little longer before going public, but since it's
pretty relevant to the other IntelliJ thread going on at the moment I
thought I'd jump in. For the last couple of months of happy unemployment
I've been working on a fork of La Clojure which is now about 70% migrated
to Clojure and significantly improved. It's a lot of work to develop a tool
like this, and one of the options I'm considering is starting a company to
develop it as a commercial product - JetBrains have never maintained
development of La Clojure very actively. I've been doing a little market
research but there's really not much data around about whether there are
enough people working with Clojure to sustain a product like that, and also
the community is currently very focused on open source.

One problem is that the IDE space is already fairly fractured - there's
Emacs and CCW, Clooj, Sublime Text and the promise of Light Table at some
point, and of course the current public version of La Clojure. But there's
still not a great option for something that's powerful but easy to use -
CCW is probably the closest thing to this right now. However I think it's
telling that a large fraction of people in the State of Clojure 2012 survey
still identified development tools as a major pain point.

I think that the IntelliJ platform is a fantastic base to build something
like this on. Clojure as a language makes it pretty challenging to develop
a lot of the great functionality that JetBrains are famous for, but I think
there's scope to do a lot of great things. Certainly for mixed Clojure/Java
projects it would be difficult to beat, but even for Clojure only projects
I can imagine a lot of fantastic functionality built on their
infrastructure. My plan would be to release a standalone IDE and a plugin
for people using IntelliJ Ultimate for web dev, Ruby/Python or whatever.
Since it's mostly Clojure now (and I'm migrating what's left as I get to
it) there's a real possibility of a Clojure plugin/extension API. I
envision charging PyCharm/RubyMine type prices, say $200 for company
licenses or $100 for individual developers.

So, I'd love to hear what people think. I'd appreciate it if we could stay
away from the politics of open source vs proprietary - several people have
told me privately that they'd rather use OSS and that's fine, proprietary
isn't for everyone. What I'd like to know is if the idea is appealing to
many people here?

In case it's a concern for anyone, I've discussed this with JetBrains.

Thanks for any feedback,

Cheers,
Colin

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