About 3 days ago, I updated CIDER, seems it can work again now. After
considering your mentioned problems of managing sessions, seems CIDER
implemented new middleware called "sesman", have not tried it in details, I
will dig into it later.
Hmm, because I use ob-clojure to do "Literate Programmi
No, there is no public repo and I'm not sure I even kept what little I
had done - it was just a hacked elisp file. I'll have a look through my
elisp archive, but don't expect much.
Over the weekend, I caught up on a bit of clojure and things have
progressed in the last few months. I notice the c
Tim Cross writes:
> I did begin to look at it. From memory, the inf-clojure integration didn't
> look that hard,
> but it did require some additional scaffolding to mae the comms work well. I
> then got
> distracted with a new job and haven't had time to go back to it. Currently,
> I've not
I did begin to look at it. From memory, the inf-clojure integration didn't
look that hard, but it did require some additional scaffolding to mae the
comms work well. I then got distracted with a new job and haven't had time
to go back to it. Currently, I've not had time to do any Clojure work, so
i
Tim Cross writes:
> I did this a couple of times in the past, but not long afterwards, CIDER
> would again change and the interface would no longer work.
>
> Personally, I'm not convinced that using CIDER actually provides much
> advantage at this time due to how rapidly it is evolving. Org wou
I did this a couple of times in the past, but not long afterwards, CIDER
would again change and the interface would no longer work.
Personally, I'm not convinced that using CIDER actually provides much
advantage at this time due to how rapidly it is evolving. Org would
likely do better just havi