Wisp: Whitespace to Lisp
========================
define : hello (define (hello)
display "Hello World" ⇒ (display "Hello World"))
define : hello who (define (hello who)
display ⇒ (display
string-append (string-append
. "Hello " who "Hello " who)))
defun a : b c (defun a (b c)
let (let
: d e ((d e)
: f ⇒ ((f)
' g '(g)))
h i (h i)
. j j))
Wisp turns indentation based syntax into Lisp. The conversion is homoiconic[^h], generic[^g], and backwards-compatible[^b]. It is inspired by project readable, but tries to keep itself simple (and stupid: just a preprocessor). More information on the [wisp-website][].
[wisp-website]: http://draketo.de/light/english/wisp-lisp-indentation-preprocessor
Usage: ./wisp.py infile.wisp > outfile.lisp
More powerful usage (in case you use unix):
cat infile.wisp | ./wisp.py - | guile -s /dev/stdin
That converts the infile to scheme and executes it via guile.
Or with bash, extend this to a multiline input:
while IFS= read in ; do echo "$in" ; done | ./wisp.py - | guile -s /dev/stdin
(finish the input with CTRL-D)
(Note: IFS= ensures that initial blanks are kept)
Also see `./wisp-multiline.sh --help`
License: GPLv3 or later.
[^h]: Wisp is homoiconic because everything you write gets turned into lisp which is homoiconic.
[^g]: Wisp is generic, because it works for any language which uses brackets to start a function call - which is true for most lisps. You simply get rid of the speerwall of parentheses without losing their power.
[^b]: Wisp is backwards compatible, because you can simply use arbitrary lisp code in wisp: Indentation processing skipps expressions in brackets.