Emacs Lisp is not a young language and can go quite a long way, but it has a couple of issues that are not going to be solved any time soon:
-
It’s dynamically typed which makes refactoring large extensions a pain
-
It’s intepreted and is quite slow. It might be argued that editors don’t need much computing power, but from time to time computation-intensive tasks do occur. For example, fuzzy matching provided by the cool flx.el package and used by great ivy.el package to quickly find things.
-
Somewhat related to the previous point, there’s virtually no support for parallelising computations. There’re adavances on adding threads to Emacs lisp, but this only provides concurrency, but no parallelism.
Haskell is well known for solving points 1 and 3 outlined above. For me it also solves point 2 by providing enough performance and adding parallelism on top of it.
If you think this might be a good idea and would like to see what this package can do for you, you can look at part of my emacs config that uses this package to implement things like
- Rewrite of
flx.el
that leverages parallelism - Fast search across filesystem
- Concurrrent grep reimplementation (somewhat dubious since things like
ripgrep
exist)
- Rewrite of
See tutorial at https://github.com/sergv/emacs-module/blob/master/Tutorial.md.
Also check out this package’s tests.
It works, Cabal can build a dll for you.
How it’s related to haskell-emacs?
The haskell-emacs
aims to address the same problem - writing Emacs
extensions in Haskell, but uses different approach. It seems to use
some kind of marshalling scheme to make Emacs data available in
Haskell with a caveat that not all Emacs types can be converted (e.g.
buffers cannot be typically serialised). Presumably, an extension
built with this project will look like an executable that reads sexps
from stdin and produces output on stdout. Or, possibly, as a daemon
process that communicates with Emacs over network.
This project is a bit different. It wraps Emacs C API for writing new
extensions that can manipulate Emacs values directly, without
marhsalling. In this approach, an extension will look like a shared
library/dll that can be loaded by standard emacs with (load "/tmp/libmy-ext.so")
.
Tested with GHC 9.2
, 9.4
, 9.6
, 9.8
.