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[[!meta title="Writing a Language Server In OCaml for Emacs, fun, and profit"]]
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# Writing a Language Server In OCaml for Emacs, fun, and profit
Austin Theriault (he/they) - last name prounounced tare -e -o, <mailto:austin@cutedogs.org>

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Recently, while working at Semgrep, Inc. I wrote a language server for our
SAST tool in OCaml:
<https://github.com/returntocorp/semgrep/tree/develop/src/language_server>. I
then added support for it to emacs
<https://github.com/emacs-lsp/lsp-mode/blob/master/clients/lsp-semgrep.el>.
In this talk I plan to go over what LSP is, why it's important, getting
started writing a language server, and supporting a language server in
Emacs.

About the speaker:

Austin Theriault is a software engineer at Semgrep, Inc. working on
their SAST tool Semgrep. In this talk he will cover the Language
Server Protocol, a way to provide language features to an editor, why
it's important to the future of editors, and how someone might go
about writing a server, and how to integrate it with Emacs.
# Discussion

## Questions and answers

-   Q:Why not write the LSP server in OCaml? I missed the reasoning to
    switch to Rust/etc - performance?
    -   A: The "stack" (cross-compilation, libraries, etc.) being less
        developed than for developing LSP servers in, e.g., TypeScript
-   Q: What are the corner cases, limitations, and other issues you
    encountered in implementing an LSP server with client in Emacs, that
    were surprising?
    -   A: Multiple, but performance being the big one. Caching
        implementation. And then delivery/distribution (doing so
        cross-platform given the OCaml tooling, etc.)


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