Literate Clojure Programming: Anatomy of a Org-Mode File(fgiasson.com)
fgiasson.com
Literate Clojure Programming: Anatomy of a Org-Mode File
http://fgiasson.com/blog/index.php/2016/08/11/literate-clojure-programming-anatomy-of-a-org-mode-file/
10 comments
Shameless plug: more examples of literate Clojure in Emacs here, https://github.com/limist/literate-programming-examples
Let me plug 'Leo', the programming editor here which brings literate programming to lots of other programming languages.
Actually "plugging" it : http://leoeditor.com/
Which would, weirdly, seem to imply that you can't use org-mode for literate programming in any language you have an Emacs mode for. But, you can, while still having your normal editor (at least for Emacs users), which is a big win over adopting and learning a special-purpose editor.
Now, how does it compare to Emacs+org-mode?
Been using org-mode for a few years.
Been using org-mode for a few years.
Wayback Machine with Styling: https://web.archive.org/web/20160811193330/http://fgiasson.c...
This is hardly news: if anyone has dug the org-mode website hard enough, they would have found this: https://www.jstatsoft.org/article/view/v046i03
Link is: "A Multi-Language Computing Environment for Literate Programming and Reproducible Research" and it is basically an overview of org-mode for literate programming and paper writing.
Link is: "A Multi-Language Computing Environment for Literate Programming and Reproducible Research" and it is basically an overview of org-mode for literate programming and paper writing.
What's up with people posting cache links o_O
Besides, what do I need a cache for when there are custom rss feeds and Inoreader (https://www.inoreader.com/article/3a9c6e7f9664fe00/literate-...) :p
Besides, what do I need a cache for when there are custom rss feeds and Inoreader (https://www.inoreader.com/article/3a9c6e7f9664fe00/literate-...) :p
The link was down for many hours earlier, so providing a link where you can actually read the content is nice.