Hi folks, For a non-technical problem, I'm afraid that I have to replace the earlier Emacs Lisp example with other ones:
Scheme: http://www.cs.indiana.edu/~yw21/demos/mk-mk-c.html C++: http://www.cs.indiana.edu/~yw21/demos/d8-3404-d8-8424.html Thanks to Neil Van Dyke for noticing this problem. -- Yin On Fri, Sep 14, 2012 at 4:34 AM, Yin Wang <yinwa...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hello, > > I'm developing a tool for "diffing" program by parse trees and not > text. It is written in Racket and can process Lisp family languages, > C++, JavaScript and Python. It has a JavaScript based interactive UI > for browsing the diff results. > > You can find a demo of it (diffing two Emacs Lisp programs) here: > > http://www.cs.indiana.edu/~yw21/demos/paredit20-paredit22.html > > (Try scrolling down the program, and click on the code in white boxes.) > > > If you are interested in trying it out on Racket programs, please > check it out from GitHub: > > https://github.com/yinwang0/ydiff > > > An introductory article can be found on my blog: > > http://yinwang0.wordpress.com/2012/01/03/ydiff > > > It is still in pretty early stage so probably only the Lisp part is > robust enough for daily use. I'm proceeding to design a "unified > interchange format" for ASTs. The motivation is that compiler writers > for various languages can output this format, so that this kind of > structural diff can be extended to new languages quickly. > > I would be happy to get feedback and suggestions about it so that I > can work to improve it. If you would like volunteer adding support for > more languages, please let me know. > > Thanks. > > > -- Yin ____________________ Racket Users list: http://lists.racket-lang.org/users