LFE, Lisp Flavoured Erlang, is a lisp syntax front-end to the Erlang compiler. Code produced with it is compatible with "normal" Erlang code. An LFE evaluator and shell is also included.
To compile LFE, simple clone it and compile:
$ git clone https://github.com/lfe/lfe.git
$ cd lfe
$ make compileLFE requires Erlang be installed on the system and that the erl binary is
in $PATH.
To run the full suite of tests for LFE, simply use the following:
make testsShould you wish to have LFE available system-wide, you can run
the following make target:
$ make installBy default this will create the programs lfe, lfec, lfedoc and
lfescript in /usr/local/bin. This can be changed by defining the
make variable PREFIX to point to the desired parent directory.
Note that the install target will also install the LFE man pages in the
appropriate $(PREFIX)/share/man/man* directories. This can be changed by
defining the make variable MANINSTDIR to point to the desired top
man directory.
So:
$ make install PREFIX=/Users/rv/ MANINSTDIR=/Users/rv/manwill put the programs in /Users/rv/bin and the man pages in the
/Users/rv/man/man* directories.
If you're running LFE from a git clone working dir, you can start the REPL like so after compiling:
$ ./bin/lfeErlang/OTP 26 [erts-14.0.2] [source] [64-bit] [smp:10:10] [ds:10:10:10] [async-threads:1] [jit] [dtrace]
..-~.~_~---..
( \\ ) | A Lisp-2+ on the Erlang VM
|`-.._/_\\_.-': | Type (help) for usage info.
| g |_ \ |
| n | | | Docs: http://docs.lfe.io/
| a / / | Source: http://github.com/lfe/lfe
\ l |_/ |
\ r / | LFE v2.2.0 (abort with ^G)
`-E___.-'
lfe>
If you have installed LFE, then you may start the REPL from any location:
$ lfeLikewise, you may run an LFE shell script in the same style as shell scripts with:
$ ./bin/lfe script-name script-arg-1 ...or
$ lfe script-name script-arg-1 ...The docs site has several places to explore that will show you how to start using LFE. However, here's a quick taste:
- start up an LFE REPL as demonstrated above
- then, do something like this:
lfe> (* 2 (+ 1 2 3 4 5 6))
42
lfe> (* 2 (lists:foldl #'+/2 0 (lists:seq 1 6)))
42LFE now supports Docker. To get started, simply do the following, once you have Docker set up on your machine:
$ docker pull lfex/lfeAlternatively, you could build the image yourself:
$ cd lfe
$ docker build .To bring up the LFE REPL:
$ docker run -it lfex/lfeFiles with more technical details:
- lfe.txt
- lfescript.txt
- lfe_bits.txt
- lfe_clj.txt
- lfe_comp.txt
- lfe_docs.txt
- lfe_gen.txt
- lfe_io.txt
- lfe_lib.txt
- lfe_macro.txt
If you would like to make changes to the LFE documentation and then regenerate the docs, you'll want to read the instructions here:
LFE on Slack, join by requesting an invite here
Steps:
- Update the version in
src/lfe.app.src - Create the release tags
- Create a release on Github
- Publish to hex.pm
Once the app.src has been updated with the version for the release, you can create and push the tags (to Github) with the following:
make tagsThat will create the number-only version as well as the "v"-prefixed version.
For now, the process of creating a release on Github is manual:
- Go to https://github.com/lfe/lfe/releases
- Click "Draft new release"
- Select the correct tag from the drop-down "Choose a tag"
- Click "Generate release notes"
- Click "Publish release"
Lastly, to publish LFE to hex.pm, you need to have rebar3 installed on our system and an entry for the hex plugin in your system rebar.config file. With that in place, publish a new release to hex.pm requires only the following:
make publish