People who use Parinfer rather than Paredit when learning Clojure really like it. The concept is available in the Clojure mode in all the usual suspects of IDEs (IntelliJ Cursive, emacs Cider, etc.)
The size of the community is not as important as the value of what is available. It's just not widely known, or maybe there's still much potential yet unrealized.
This is an oldie but a goodie on how interactive an experience you can have when using Clojure on the front end and backend of a web app:
This project is the most recent and most promising iteration of someone making a very visual interactive tool for introspecting on data structures in the REPL environment
https://shaunlebron.github.io/parinfer/
The size of the community is not as important as the value of what is available. It's just not widely known, or maybe there's still much potential yet unrealized.
This is an oldie but a goodie on how interactive an experience you can have when using Clojure on the front end and backend of a web app:
https://figwheel.org/
This project is the most recent and most promising iteration of someone making a very visual interactive tool for introspecting on data structures in the REPL environment
https://github.com/djblue/portal