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#gcl — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #gcl, aggregated by home.social.

  1. GCL’s 4Divinity to Distribute 'Windrose' Pirate Game Across Asia

    📰 Original title: GCL’s 4Divinity Inks Asia-Wide (Excluding Japan) Distribution and Publishing Agreement with Developer of ‘Windrose’

    🤖 IA: It's not clickbait ✅
    👥 Usuarios: It's not clickbait ✅

    View full AI summary: killbait.com/en/gcls-4divinity

    #videogames #pirategame #windrose #gcl

  2. Apps like Raycast, KRunner, Alfred, and Spotlight are commonly called Application Launchers. They’re so much more than that though. If you really about it — They’re really GUI Command Lines. GCL for short.

    #raycast #AlfredApp #KRunner #spotlight #GCL

  3. Holy crap #gcl is public now! gcl.readthedocs.io/en/latest/s
    Since when? I’m so excited y’all. I was just about to give a tutorial on dynamic configuration languages with some examples I have of building local and cloud environments driven by jsonnet, but now that gcl is open source and it’s got good Python integration, I can’t wait to redo some examples with it. They should get even simpler and maybe look less fancy than my wild functional list-compy lazy jsonnet :) (gcl can be a little stricter but clearer and probably a lot easier for non-lispers and non-haskellers to pick up!). Nix and dhall and jsonnet are wonderful, but kind of caters to us lambda heads and/or applied category theory and type theory nerds). GCL is definitely more accessible. At any rate, some kind of configuration language with similar philosophies is *the* best known way to tame configuration sprawl and madness!

  4. @defcfun hi there. Interesting profile.

    I went back to #Debian -based systems after a little period on #Gentoo; I really appreciated USE flags but could never predict what an update would do.

    I also saw a boost of a #GCL release; I didn't know it was still being developed! Personally, I have gone from being a fan of #CommonLisp to actually learning #Prolog (with #Logtalk) instead.

    Also a big #Erlang fan, which is how I ended up at Prolog actually.