Enter the query into the form above. You can look for specific version of a package by using @ symbol like this: gcc@10.
API method:
GET /api/packages?search=hello&page=1&limit=20
where search is your query, page is a page number and limit is a number of items on a single page. Pagination information (such as a number of pages and etc) is returned
in response headers.
If you'd like to join our channel webring send a patch to ~whereiseveryone/toys@lists.sr.ht adding your channel as an entry in channels.scm.
This library provides almost the same code as used inside Quicklisp for drawning progress bars
This package provides a canonical way of converting generalized booleans to booleans.
This is a terminfo database front end in Common Lisp. The package provides a method for determining which capabilities a terminal (e.g. "xterm") has and methods to compile or put commands to a stream.
This is a Common Lisp logging framework that can log at various levels and mix text with expressions.
cl-quicklisp-stats is a system that fetches and performs basic operations on the Quicklisp download statistics.
clingon is a command-line option parsing library for Common Lisp. Its features include:
Support for subcommands
Support for command aliases
Support for short and long options
Related options may be grouped into categories
Short options may be collapsed into a single argument, as in
-xyzLong options support the notations
--long-opt argand--long-opt=argAutomatic generation of help/usage information for commands and subcommands
Out-of-the-box support for
--versionand--helpSupport for various kinds of options including string, integer, boolean, switch, enum, list, counter, filepath, etc.
Subcommands can look up global options defined in parent commands
Support for required options
Options can be initialized via environment variables
Single interface for creating options using
CLINGON:MAKE-OPTIONGenerate documentation for your command-line application
Support for
pre-hookandpost-hookactions for commands, which allow invoking functions before and after the respective handler of the command is executedSupport for Bash and Zsh completions
Extensibility, so if you don't find something you need you can extend it by developing a new option kind, or even a new mechanism for initializing options, e.g., by looking up an external key/value store
This package provides a Common Lisp system implementing event bus.
charje.lambda-list can parse every kind of lambda list defined in the ANSI Common Lisp standard. Parsing yields only one object that has all the parsed parts of the lambda list inside. New kinds of lambda lists can be made too.
McCLIM is an implementation of the Common Lisp Interface Manager specification, a toolkit for writing GUIs in Common Lisp.
iterate is an iteration construct for Common Lisp. It is similar to the CL:LOOP macro, with these distinguishing marks:
it is extensible,
it helps editors like Emacs indent iterate forms by having a more lisp-like syntax, and
it isn't part of the ANSI standard for Common Lisp.
This library retrieves locale information configured on the system. This is helpful if you want to write applications and libraries that display messages in the user's native language.
one-more-re-nightmare is a regular expression engine that uses the technique presented in Regular-expression derivatives re-examined (Owens, Reppy and Turon, 2009; doi:10.1017/S0956796808007090) to interpret and compile regular expressions.
cl-syslog is a Common Lisp library that provides access to the syslog logging facility.
This library simplifies functional programming in Common Lisp by making it easier to make new data structures with specified changes in place.
NDebug provides a small set of utilities to make graphical (or, rather non-REPL-resident) Common Lisp applications easier to integrate with the standard Lisp debugger (*debugger-hook*, namely) and implementation-specific debugger hooks (via trivial-custom-debugger), especially in a multi-threaded context.
The Type-Templates library allows you to define types and “template functions” that can be expanded into various type-specialized versions to eliminate runtime dispatch overhead. It was specifically designed to implement low-level numerical data types and functionality.
This package provides a Common Lisp web framework for building GUI applications. CLOG can take the place, or work along side, most cross platform GUI frameworks and website frameworks. The CLOG package starts up the connectivity to the browser or other websocket client (often a browser embedded in a native template application).
This package provides an example implementation of the Common Lisp condition system and library, based on the original condition system implementation by Kent M. Pitman.
This package allows flexible specification of package-local preferences.
The server part of AllegroServe can be used either as a standalone web server or a module loaded into an application to provide a user interface to the application. AllegroServe's proxy ability allows it to run on the gateway machine between some internal network and the Internet. AllegroServe's client functions allow Lisp programs to explore the web.
This library is a Common Lisp port of all the constants from the event codes header file found on Linux and FreeBSD.
fast-http is a HTTP request/response protocol parser for Common Lisp.
This package provides a KDL reader/writer for Common Lisp.
Static dispatch is a Common Lisp library, inspired by inlined-generic-function, which allows standard Common Lisp generic function dispatch to be performed statically (at compile time) rather than dynamically (runtime). This is similar to what is known as "overloading" in languages such as C++ and Java.
The purpose of static dispatch is to provide an optimization in cases where the usual dynamic dispatch is too slow, and the dynamic features of generic functions, such as adding/removing methods at runtime are not required. An example of such a case is a generic equality comparison function. Currently generic functions are considered far too slow to implement generic arithmetic and comparison operations when used heavily in numeric code.