Next Browser
Nearest Browser09.53.53-2 1.84-2 3.25C6 11.31 7.55 13 9 13h4c1.45 0 3-1.69 3-3.5S14.5 6 13 6z" fill-rule="evenodd">Quick change of rider
The Next is a scalable, keyboard-oriented web browser from Emacs, developed for professional use. Featuring trusted button assignments, fully customizable and expandable in Lisp, and high-performance capabilities for production workers, the solution is easy to deploy and use. The Next feature set contains many functions that allow you to concentrate on productivity. Simply toggle between your open tab pages through the blurred searching.
The story is presented as a treetree that you can cross. Even more sophisticated than the "forward backward abstraction" in other web browser, the boom ensures that you never loose sight of where you were. At this point a standard browser would NOT be able to redirect you to your gray parrot session.
Rather than deleting your progress, Next provides clever navigational intelligence and asks the operator to do so. The next is easy and quick. Fuszy complement means clever complement. Bookmark, open new hyperlinks or change folders with the powerful features of Complete Fun. The adjustment is possible by creating a ~/.config/next/init.lisp-files. You can overwrite and re-define any of the features from here by redefining your initial files as part of the:next bundle.
You can find more information under: Continue Customizing. Please read the Next Usermanual for complete information on how it works and how to expand it.
Display HN: nEXT Browser - A Lisp-based Browser
Do not want to replace css with lisp. CSS is declared, latp is mandatory/functional. It can be very informative. My whole wallpaper could be left untouched between SumpWM, Emmacs & now NEXT. Instead of using ECL to encapsulate latp in C++, have you been considering using an FFI to call QT from within latp?
Of course there is nothing incorrect in your attempt (the honorable esmacs are llisp on a chore, after all!). Let the Common Linp's lights shine like a lighthouse of hopes and delight for the faithful hacker! EQL5 repertoire has a readyme that I think has window statements if you can run EQL5, nEXT is simple, you would just enter'eql5 run. lisp' from the sources and it would just work!
Apple lawyers might notice the emblem and the strange case of "nEXT" if they still take charge of the NeXT brands at all. Since Vimperator is mostly gone, this looks like a potentially interesting option to have a browser that is programable. I' d like to think that a "lisp-based" browser implements its rendering engines in lisp, probably on CLIM.
If not, use Lisp only as a scripted locale to join a few ready-made parts together. In that case it doesn't matter that it is a Lisp-based text box because its renders are in C. GNU enmacs is certainly not a Lisp-based text box like the different Zmacs implementation, or like Hemlock.
It is an Lisp based scripter. But I don't think that's entirely correct, because a lot of the edit functions are in Emacs Lisp. The Emacs Lisp is an implementing as well as a writing languages. It' s just that there is another implementing idiom underneath...... Given the amount of work it would take to rewrite an HTML rendering machine from the ground up, this is a sensible approach.
First, there is already a commercially available program named "Next Browser" - it will appear before your Google search bar. Secondly, when I think of "Next Browser", I think of the following: I am open to all naming suggestions, after saying it all I like the name nEXT Browser very much because it gives an impression of effectiveness, advancement and performance.
Eh, why not a three-dimensional browser ola croquet/cobalt?