Call for Interest: Clojure (or Lisp?) Code Camp with BLM focus

Daniel Herring dherring at tentpost.com
Tue Jul 7 03:22:21 UTC 2020


Hi Ken,

I think music is a great way to engage a wider audience of potential 
developers.  It has a wider appeal and lower barrier to entry than many 
other programming activities.

Having seen kids fire up a web browser to do "Scratch programming", I'm 
convinced that a web-based platform is the most accessible.  People can 
use almost any computer to create accounts, create projects, and 
share/publish projects.  Only seasoned developers are comfortable with the 
concept of "install this editor, compiler, and Git".  :)

Here's an interesting language, though it may not have a audio library 
yet.

https://www.pyret.org/

- Daniel



On Mon, 6 Jul 2020, Ken Tilton wrote:

> "actively under development"! Music (sorry) to my ears! The Lisp and ADD genes must overlap seriously. I started one of the videos. Really nice live coding.
> 
> I'll make sure our code camp grad school uses CL.
> 
> Thx!
> 
> -hk
> 
> On Mon, Jul 6, 2020 at 8:11 PM Andy Peterson <andy.arvid at gmail.com> wrote:
>       https://github.com/byulparan/cl-collider "A SuperCollider client for CommonLisp"
> 
> Never tried this but I've been following it for a few years and it is actively under development.
> 
> Andy 
> 
> On Mon, 6 Jul 2020 at 13:57, Ken Tilton <kentilton at gmail.com> wrote:
>       Thanks for the seconding motion! But part of the plan is high accessibility, and low cost. I just noticed the pricing on OpusModus, bit of a showstopper there. 
> 
> We would use Clojure Overtone https://overtone.github.io/ but that sits atop Supercollider, not sure if that would make installation a PITA. Ideally we would have sth built atop Web Audio, but
> then we really are super low-level. I think! Have to look into that. 
> 
> We would want to hook the students with solid music before taking them down to the basics, so existing effects etc would be great to have, but again, this is about coding in general, not music
> generation. That is just the hook.
> 
> Thx again! If some campers get more turned on by music than coding that will be a great next step.
> 
> On Mon, Jul 6, 2020 at 1:43 PM dbm at refined-audiometrics.com <dbm at refined-audiometrics.com> wrote:
>
>       Yes, I was also going to suggest OpusModus. I see little purpose in reinventing any portion of what they have done.
> 
> I have been a user for about 2 years now. It seems to be the defacto replacement for an earlier product done in Lispworks, from Italy, called Symbolic Composer. OpusModus is very good, and
> getting better every day. They just implemented live MIDI recording in the latest version.
> 
> - David McClain
> Refined Audiometrics Laboratory, LLC
> Tucson, AZ, USA
> refined-audiometrics.com
> 
>
>       On Jul 6, 2020, at 8:11 AM, Ken Tilton <kentilton at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Sounds great, I will keep it in mind if we loosen the web/mobile-native constraint. Or maybe as a direction for campers who take off -- no need then to fret over platform,
> power will matter.
> 
> Thx!
> 
> 
> On Mon, Jul 6, 2020 at 10:54 AM Stonewall Ballard <stoney at sb.org> wrote:
>       Ken,
> 
> Are you familiar with Opusmodus?
> <http://opusmodus.com>
> 
> It’s written in Clozure ccl, and besides providing an incredible array of music manipulation functions and structures, it’s got a beautiful window system. Mac only.
> 
> Your idea of using music as a hook to learn Lisp sounds plausible. Good Luck!
> 
>  - Stoney
> ————Stonewall Ballard    stoney at sb.org   http://stoney.sb.org
> 
> On Monday, July 6 at 8:15:31 AM, Ken Tilton (kentilton at gmail.com) wrote:
> 
> So I got to thinking about creating an approachable pathway to IT careers for anyone really, but in the spirit of today one focused on creating career opportunities for
> African Americans.
> 
> The idea would be a code camp developed around algorithmic generation of music. I know nothing about music theory, except that there is prolly enough there to introduce
> most if not all fundamental programming concepts.
> 
> For those campers that accidentally get hooked on programming itself, which is how many of us ended up in IT careers, away they go!
> 
> The idea is to:
>  *  use music as the hook;
>  *  defer as long as possible the annoying things about programming (I am looking at you, node.js);
>  *  part of that ^^^ will be using a powerful language with the parentheses in the right place, prolly ClojureScript since that could run where JS runs;
>  *  keep programming as the focus, as tempting as the music will be. Sonic Pi comes with all sorts of built-in sound capabilities, but we want to develop those in the
>     code camp;
>  *  tailor the program to specific musical genres, to maximize the musical hook.
> I am dropping this here since I know many Common Lispers have a strong musical bent. My questions are:
>  *  Could we use CL instead? I do think this almost has to be a web app, perhaps even mobile. Hmmm, we could CL-ify CLJS with sufficent clever macrology.
>  *  What do you think? Can a solid programming fundamentals course be expressed in music theory? Hint: HTTP is not a programming fundamental.
>  *  If there is any interest, what would be a good place for an ongoing discussion? Google groups?
> Ideas, comments, suggestions all welcome.
> 
> -hk
> 
> 
> 
> --
> Kenneth Tilton
> http://tiltontec.com/
> 
> 
> 
> 
> --
> Kenneth Tilton
> http://tiltontec.com/
> 
> 
> 
> --
> Kenneth Tilton
> http://tiltontec.com/
> 
>


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