clojure-py
An implementation of Clojure in pure Python.
Why Python?
It is our belief that static virtual machines make very poor runtimes for dynamic languages. They constrain the languages to their view of what the "world should look like" and limit the options available to language implementors. We are attempting to prove this by writing an implementation of Clojure that runs on the Python VM. We believe that with a proper dynamic JIT (like pypy) a version of clojure running on a dynamic VM can outperform its JVM and CLR counterparts.
Basic concepts
Python builtins are available under the py/ namespace. Actual python bytecodes can be injected via py.bytecodes/OP
Viewing the code at https://github.com/halgari/clojure-py/blob/master/clojure/core.clj is probably the best way to get a feeling of what is possible, and how clojure-py implements certain functions.
How can I help?
Check out the Wiki for more information about the roadmap for this project. Then check out the issues list for any items marked "isolated change". These are changes that should be somewhat easy for a newcommer to pick up and will not involve messing around with the internals of the implementation much. Also feel free to join our mailing list
Blog
From time to time, we'll post status updates, ideas and plans to this blog http://clojure-py.blogspot.com/
Installation
./setup.py develop # or ./setup.py install for 'production'
Unit tests
# (must 'easy_install nose' or 'pip install nose' first)
nosetests
Running
clojurepy
License
Not endorsed by Rich Hickey, but this project contains code based on his work
Clojure-Py Copyright (c) Rich Hickey. All rights reserved. The use and distribution terms for this software are covered by the Eclipse Public License 1.0 (http://opensource.org/licenses/eclipse-1.0.php) which can be found in the file epl-v10.html at the root of this distribution. By using this software in any fashion, you are agreeing to be bound by the terms of this license. You must not remove this notice, or any other, from this software.