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ClojureX

Easy set up for Clojure.

Supported Platforms

  • Linux (tested on Ubuntu 9.10)
  • Mac OS X 10.5+
  • Windows (Cygwin)

Set Up Instructions

$ git clone git://github.com/citizen428/ClojureX.git clojure
$ cd clojure

Grab all packages (clojure, clojure-contrib, jline and TextMate/Emacs support):

$ git submodule init
$ git submodule update

Build the packages with ant:

$ ant

To create a symlink for the clj script in /usr/local/bin you can run the following command:

$ ./create_symlink

If you prefer to create the link somewhere else, you can do it manually like this:

$ ln -s <full path to this project>/clj <destination path>/clj

Note: The clj script expects $JAVA_HOME in its environment. If $JAVA_HOME is not set, it will attempt to determine it for you. If for some reason you cannot provide $JAVA_HOME, you can set the $JAVA variable at the top of the clj script.

To setup support for TextMate, run the following command which creates a symlink to the bundle in ~/Library/Application\ Support/TextMate/Bundles/:

$ ./configure_textmate

If you prefer Emacs for Clojure development the following command will add the necessary configuration for clojure-mode, slime and swank-clojure to your ~/.emacs:

$ ./configure_emacs

Usage

The clj command can be used to open an interactive session:

$ clj
Clojure 1.1.0-master-SNAPSHOT
user=>

It can be used to run a script:

$ clj test.clj
Hello, Clojure!

Any options following the script will be passed as arguments to the script:

$ clj test.clj a b "c d"
Hello, Clojure!
Arg #1: a
Arg #2: b
Arg #3: c d

Use a shebang line at the start of your script to make a Clojure file executable:

#!/usr/bin/env clj

Of course, you'll also need to enable the script's execute mode (e.g., chmod u+x <scriptname>) to run it this way.

You can also open a debug port using the -d or --debug options:

$ clj -d 1234 test.clj

Additionally, the clj script supports all of clojure.main's command-line options. For example, to evaluate an expression, use -e or --eval. The script's value will be sent to standard output:

$ clj -e "(take 5 (iterate inc 0))"
(0 1 2 3 4)
$ clj --eval '(count "Hello, Clojure")'
14

Use the -i or --init option to evaluate a clojure script:

$ clj -i test.clj
Hello, Clojure

You can intermix the eval and init options multiple times, and they will be evaluated in the specified order:

$ clj -e '"Before test"' -i test.clj -e '"After test"'
"Before test"
Hello, Clojure!
"After test"

The clj script will exit immediate after processing all the init/eval options. Use -r or --repl to instead start an interactive session.

$ clj -e '"Starting my own REPL"' -r
"Starting my own REPL"
user=>

Finally, clj supports all of the java command line options to configure the JVM.

$ clj -d64 -Xms4g -Xmx4g -verbose:gc -i wf2.clj -e '(wf/wf-atoms "O.all")'

To see a full description of clj command-line options, pass it -?, -h, or --help

$ clj --help
Usage: clj ...

Working with Clojure

To add extra jar files to Clojure's classpath on a project-by-project basis, just create a .clojure file in the project's directory. Here's an example:

If your project directory is ~/code/clojure/cafe, you can add the Grinder and Frother jars from the ~/code/clojure/cafe/lib directory by putting their relative paths, separated by a colon, into the .clojure file:

$ cd ~/code/clojure/cafe
$ echo "lib/grinder.jar:lib/frother.jar" > .clojure

You can also list jars one per line in the .clojure file, like so:

$ cd ~/code/clojure/cafe
$ ls -1 lib/*.jar > .clojure

Staying up to date

Once you have a local checkout of ClojureX, it's easy to keep your Clojure installation up to date:

$ cd clojure
$ cd <submodule you want to update>
$ git pull origin master

To update the source for all submodules at the same time, you can issue the following command:

$ ./update_all

If there were any updates to clojure, clojure-contrib or jline you will have to rebuild them like this:

$ ant

Todo

  • Add scripts to work with Clojure projects after installation

Acknowledgements