On Saturday, February 27, 2016 at 7:09:39 PM UTC-6, Alan Moore wrote:
>
> It kind of depends on the backend you are targeting. If it looks and 
> smells like the JVM you might look at ClojureCLR.
>
> If it looks like Python see Clojure-metal by Timothy B.
>
> The ClojureScript compiler was optimized for speed (as recently pointed 
> out) so it may not be as straight forward to use as a reference. Although, 
> as it is/can be self hosting this may be an advantage if your goals include 
> self-hosting on the target.
>
> What are your target/goals?
>
> Alan
>

I thought I might fool around with a Clojure on Common Lisp because I want 
some things that Common Lisp runtimes do and existing Clojure runtimes 
don't. I know how to write Lisp compilers and interpreters and how to 
implement Clojure's data structures, so what I mainly want is a handy 
reference to the definition o the language so that I'm not just bumbling 
around in in random documentation. But I wouldn't mind swiping from 
existing compilers wherever it makes sense.

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