LICENSE | ||
ob-sclang.el | ||
README.org |
Why do I even?
Org-mode makes literate programming easy via Library of Babel. Il simply allows to mix text with executable code blocks (which can also be extracted (tangled) into separate, executable files. The beauty the Library of Babel implementation in org-mode lies in the fact that it supports many languages. I craved support for SuperCollider and craving became an itch when I needed to document a working pipeline alternating between executing sclang and shell scripts. I scratched an itch with this little module.
How to install?
First of all, you will need emacs and SuperCollider (with emacs
support) installed. Modern emacsen (>25) and Spacemacs come with
bundled org-mode. At this point I am the sole user of this plugin and
have just written it so I am not itching yet for MELPA or inclusion in
the official org-mode repositories, so installation is manual. You can
either drop file:ob-sclang.el somewhere in
your Emacs' path or add it to .init
file:
(add-to-list 'load-path "/path/to/ob-sclang.el")
You will also have to add it to (org-babel-do-load-languages)
(org-babel-do-load-languages
'(org-babel-load-languages
(quote
((sclang . t)))))
And then?
well, then you type a clock like this one:
#+BEGIN_SRC sclang
"boo".postln;
And you should see the string appear in your SCLang:PostBuffer*
Known issues
At this point, this plugin has a very crude functionality. It allows unidirectional control of SuperCollider process running inside Emacs. As such, here is a list of issues:
- sclang process has a tendency to replace Emacs frames with
Workspace
andPostBuffer
when it lunches, therefore if have not already started sclang, your code block with start it for you, but your current buffer will loose focus. - There is no support for any parameters that code blocks usually support
- The code you execute will not return anything back to the document you are working in
I may raise the first point with the current sclang-mode maintainer… I will probably address the second point in the near future. I have not used this set up much yet (actually, almost at all, as I just scratched my itch and only now I am ready to complete the project at hand) but could see the usefulness of passing variables from other code blocks to sclang.
The last point is probably more problematic but it may be useful to get some datatypes from sclang.
Of course feel free to open questions, suggestions, discussions and even pull requests.