| ▲ | conartist6 5 hours ago | |||||||
You won't find it in any of the academic literature because it's not an academic project: https://bablr.org/ BABLR is just the extensible streaming parser framework, but it has a few key things going for it: 1. Gap support like Hazel has, but for any language it can parse 2. Streaming parse results, which make multi-pass stream transformation easy 3. The ability to consolidate and take over the work currently done by Treesitter, LSP, Git, and the IDE itself. | ||||||||
| ▲ | lukan 5 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
So bablr is from you? "BABLR is a parser framework roughly comparable to Tree-sitter, but built from the ground up for the web" I have to admit, I don't know why I would stop using my wasm build of treesitter that works amazing on the web for something that is "conditionally production ready". Also I don't see where your project mixed visual and textual code like this paper here explores? | ||||||||
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| ▲ | IshKebab 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
That does not look like a visual programming language? | ||||||||