diff options
author | Pierre Neidhardt <mail@ambrevar.xyz> | 2019-08-29 18:51:16 +0200 |
---|---|---|
committer | Pierre Neidhardt <mail@ambrevar.xyz> | 2019-08-29 19:09:54 +0200 |
commit | b36165b740bbe2041ea238fd9b7fea60cbfc8ff4 (patch) | |
tree | a1722800dbcecf40009d185e721331b8e55e0e94 | |
parent | 2207d522d41af2e79485ad74e29c3dedceafd060 (diff) | |
download | guix-b36165b740bbe2041ea238fd9b7fea60cbfc8ff4.tar guix-b36165b740bbe2041ea238fd9b7fea60cbfc8ff4.tar.gz |
gnu: Add sbcl-cl-xmlspam.
* gnu/packages/lisp.scm (sbcl-cl-xmlspam): New variable.
-rw-r--r-- | gnu/packages/lisp.scm | 32 |
1 files changed, 32 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/gnu/packages/lisp.scm b/gnu/packages/lisp.scm index d32f4b19bd..844baf15ae 100644 --- a/gnu/packages/lisp.scm +++ b/gnu/packages/lisp.scm @@ -6668,3 +6668,35 @@ discoverable library instead of many; consistency and composability, where @code{s} is always the last argument, which makes it easier to feed pipes and arrows.") (license license:expat)))) + +(define-public sbcl-cl-xmlspam + (let ((commit "ea06abcca2a73a9779bcfb09081e56665f94e22a")) + (package + (name "sbcl-cl-xmlspam") + (build-system asdf-build-system/sbcl) + (version (git-version "0.0.0" "1" commit)) + (home-page "https://github.com/rogpeppe/cl-xmlspam") + (source + (origin + (method git-fetch) + (uri (git-reference + (url home-page) + (commit commit))) + (file-name (string-append name "-" version)) + (sha256 + (base32 + "0w4rqvrgdgk3fwfq3kx4r7wwdr2bv3b6n3bdqwsiriw9psqzpz2s")))) + (inputs + `(("cxml" ,sbcl-cxml) + ("cl-ppcre" ,sbcl-cl-ppcre))) + (synopsis "Concise, regexp-like pattern matching on streaming XML for Common Lisp") + (description "CXML does an excellent job at parsing XML elements, but what +do you do when you have a XML file that's larger than you want to fit in +memory, and you want to extract some information from it? Writing code to deal +with SAX events, or even using Klacks, quickly becomes tedious. +@code{cl-xmlspam} (for XML Stream PAttern Matcher) is designed to make it easy +to write code that mirrors the structure of the XML that it's parsing. It +also makes it easy to shift paradigms when necessary - the usual Lisp control +constructs can be used interchangeably with pattern matching, and the full +power of CXML is available when necessary.") + (license license:bsd-3)))) |