Read a Tcl/Tk script and convert it to a Common Lisp script.
- A Common Lisp compiler (SBCL preferred)
- I am trying to write this in a portable way (as this is mostly a DSL), so any compiler may work.
- ASDF (Another System Definition Facility)
- This is the build tool
- It does *NOT* download dependencies for you!
- Quicklisp
- This is the package management tool for Common Lisp.
- Quicklisp plugs into ASDF to download and load/build the source for you.
- UIOP (Utilities for Implementation and OS Portability)
- Alexandria
- Log4CL
- Provides structured logging facilities.
- ~lisp-unit2~
- Only needed for testing!
Tcl2CL builds using the standard ASDF build system.
Make sure ASDF is capable of finding your copy of Tcl2CL.
(asdf:compile-system :tcl2cl)
If you want to force a rebuild, ASDF supports that too.
(asdf:compile-system :tcl2cl :force t)
.
Tcl2CL uses lisp-unit2 for its unit testing system.
Make sure ASDF if capable of finding your copy of Tcl2CL and lisp-unit2.
(asdf:test-system :tcl2cl)
(lisp-unit2:run-tests :package :tcl2cl/tests)
I personally felt this when specialty connection operators were required to be defined as experimental in chisel3; operators which I needed to connect hardware together.