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Setting up Clojure, Incanter, Emacs, Slime, Swank, and Paredit Emacs is the favored development environment for the majority of Clojure developers, and there are good reasons for that, but personally, I don’t think it should be the first choice of developers new to Clojure, unless they have used it previously; it’s just too much to learn at once. I recommend people use an editor they’re comfortabl
The Processing language, created by Ben Fry and Casey Reas, “is an open source programming language and environment for people who want to program images, animation, and interactions.” Incanter now includes the incanter.processing library, a fork of Roland Sadowski‘s clj-processing library, making it possible to create Processing visualizations with Clojure and Incanter. Incanter.processing provid
[NOTE: Make sure to use Leiningen version 1.1.0 or greater. The version can be determined with ‘lein version’] This is a quick guide to using Leiningen to build applications that use Incanter, based on the very useful post by Zef Hemel, “Building Clojure Projects with Leiningen“. (Note: the following tutorial uses Unix shell commands (i.e. Mac OS X or Linux), but Roland Sadowski has created a Lein
Although there were not many updates to the blog in the last years, Incanter’s development still happens with contribution of many people. As result of this, I just pushed 1.9.3 release to Clojars. This release includes several fixes in the charts library, makes Incanter completely compatible with 1.9.0 (Incanter itself still lists 1.8.0 as dependency), plus some other fixes, listed at changelog.
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