This reminds me of a trick I came up with for mixing Python and C++ in the same file using overlap in their syntax so the file is valid for both: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GXwYjI9cJd0
As a musician myself I am also quite protective about my hands but also a daily emacs user. The biggest ergonomic improvement you can make on a standard keyboard is to remap your control key to be command (most regular emacs users I know do this). At work I use a Kenesis Advantage keyboard which allows me to use my thumbs as modifiers which is even more comfortable.
To answer your question, if you are not looking for particular LISP I would checkout Racket as I think that has a non-emacs IDE.
I am not the OP for either GitHub issue nor have I responded yet; I just found these when doing a little digging after our legal department responded that they were hesitant to approve using WebView 2 in our products. Later a may join the new thread to provide that data point.
Just started reading it, but I noticed that in the chronology, in 1979 for C with Classes “public/private” is listed. Was “protected” a later addition?
I'd have to disagree; I view programming as an art similar both to music composition but also very much like painting---this may require expanding your definition of panting from the classical sense to the Dada sense of found object sculpture as a form of painting/making-your-own-paint (can't find citation, but there is a good Marcel Duchamp paper about making your own paint I was trying to find---but late for work!).
Apparently a Linux-based system was a contender for iPhone OS:
> Around 2005, Jobs faced a crucial decision. Should he give the task of developing the device’s software to the team that built the iPod, which wanted to build a Linux-based system? Or should he entrust the project to the engineers who had revitalized the software foundation of the Macintosh? In other words, should he shrink the Mac, which would be an epic feat of engineering, or enlarge the iPod? [1]
When this article first came out, I made the assumption that this statement meant iPod OS was Linux-based---also feel like I heard that somewhere else---but I have not found any sources to confirm this. Anyone else know?
Age 2, Mac Plus. One of my earliest memories---possibly the earliest[1]---is the night my parents first set it up and had a box of disks they were using to install software on a 30MB external SCSI HD. I remember really wanting to use it, but I had to wait until the morning because they had to learn how to use it first.
I think we started with System Software 2.0(4.0), but it might have been an earlier version. Soon updated to System Software 5.0 and MultiFinder (and 4MB of RAM for multifinder). I remember the upgrade to System Software 6.0, because my copy of Dark Castle stopped working---eventually I figured out that there was a copy of System and Finder on Disk 1 and that I could boot from that instead of the external SCSI HD.
My parents bought the computer for office use in their jewelry design/manufacturing studio; so I could use it there when they were doing bring-kid-to-work-daycare, but they also often brought it home in the Mac Plus carrying case. I have fond memories of using the How to Use Your Mac tutorial: the mouse tutorial and the start was fun and something I could easily learn by watching; I remember the Finder tutorial that followed challenging as it had text instructions so at first I couldn't do it on my own and would need help---I think trying to do the Finder tutorial played a big part in learning how to read.
I remember using Mac Paint a lot, but also watching my mother work on the computer and wanting to learn what she was doing: Mac Draw (for jewelry design), Excel[2], and CAT IV (CRM). My pediatritian was also a Mac user and would go to Mac World and would give me disks with SWAG games he got.
Later when my parents got a Macintosh Performa 575[3] to replace the Mac Plus, they made the fatal mistake of setting it up at home---I wasn't going to let that multimedia machine go! Luckily they made a good parenting decision and decided it would be better for my sister and I to have access to the Performa since they could get by a little longer on the Mac Plus at their office. Eventually they brought the Performa to work and replaced that with a PowerMac 7200/75.
[1]: Side note: Around this time also saw 2001: A Space Odyssey for the first time; my father got it for me as a 1st birthday present.
[2]: I liked using simple expressions for calculations, but mostly making graphs; lots of pet graphs (i.e. 1 cat, and various numbers of fish).
In a course I taught (2010) on music visualizations that's the term I used.
The example I used in the lecture where datamoshing came up was the music video for Charlift's "Evident Utensil"[1]; I always thought this was a neat example.
This reminds me of a trick I came up with for mixing Python and C++ in the same file using overlap in their syntax so the file is valid for both: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GXwYjI9cJd0