IDE based on:
- Protege 3.5 ontology editor https://protegewiki.stanford.edu/wiki/Protege_Desktop_Old_Versions
- Clojure Tab plugin to Protege https://protegewiki.stanford.edu/wiki/ClojureTab
- Figwheel Main ClojureScript library https://github.com/bhauman/figwheel-main
$ clj -M:pro
$ lein run
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Hello Arttuka - it introduces modern web GUI with the help of Arttuka's Reagent wrapper for MUI (formerly Material UI)https://github.com/arttuka/reagent-material-ui
Note on the lessons: When constructing ClojureScript programs for functions, you should create instances of the “CljsFunction” class, and not “CloFunction” as in the videos.
Used Protege 3.5 version a little bit old. It is Frame-based. Recent Protege versions are OWL-based. It is superfluous for our purposes.
This IDE has 2 important differences from traditional ones.
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With Protege, it allows you to first construct the application domain visually and manipulate it using Protege's GUI. Then add functionality to the application using Clojure programs. And finally, if necessary, develop a front-end using ClojureScript programming. This is especially useful for rapid prototyping.
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The programming environment in Protege GUI is multi-window. Each function has a separate window. This allows quite a lot of functions to be displayed on the screen at the same time (given Clojure's inherent short function paradigm), and from different namespaces! Each function window has a button to save and compile its namespace. This creates additional convenience when debugging.
Copyright © 2023 Ruslan Sorokin
Distributed under the Eclipse Public License either version 1.0 or (at your option) any later version.