ECL Quarterly Volume IV Tagged as quarterly Written by Daniel KochmaÅski on 2016-06-15 Hello, I've managed to assemble the fourth volume of the ECL Quarterly. As always a bit off schedule but I hope you'll find it interesting. This issue will revovle around ECL news, some current undertakings and plans. Additionally we'll talk about Common Lisp implementations in general and the portability layers
The Common Lisp Cookbook â Editor support ð¢ ð©âð â NEW: learn CLOS in videos! (50% coupon) Get up to speed in CL in this 7h course, by the Cookbook's main contributor, on Udemy. Learn more. ð Get the EPUB and PDF The editor of choice is still Emacs, but it is not the only one. Emacs SLIME is the Superior Lisp Interaction Mode for Emacs. It has support for interacting with a running Common Lisp
LISP has been described as the Maxwell's equations of software. Yet there's been very little focus to date on reducing these equations to their simplest possible form. Even the original LISP paper from the 1960's defines LISP with nonessential elements, e.g. LABEL. This project aims to solve that by doing three things: We provide a LISP implementation that's written in LISP, as a single pure expre
The Medley Interlisp Project a retrofuturistic software system What did we leave behind on the path to developing today's computer systems? Could there be lessons for the future of computing hidden in the past? Enter the Medley software environment to explore these questions. Welcome to the start of a new chapter in software preservation and computing. We're a group of researchers, software develo
Many thanks to Kartik Agaram and Leonard Schütz for proofreading these posts. In my last series, I wrote about building a Lisp interpreter. This time, weâre going to write a Lisp compiler. This series is an adaptation of Abdulaziz Ghuloumâs excellent paper An Incremental Approach to Compiler Construction, with several key differences: Our implementation is in C, instead of Scheme Our implementatio
2 Comparing a-cl-logger, cl-syslog, com.ravenbrook.common-lisp-log, hu.dwim.logger, log4cl, log5, verbose, and vom Common Lisp has several logging libraries to choose from (http://cliki.net/Development). Of course, many of us find ourselves throwing together an ad-hoc logging library in the middle of development. I decided I wanted to make an informed choice, leading up to this comparison article.
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