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You could be having fun with Common Lisp on your Mac right now; you know that, don’t you? ;) Lately I have been having a ball doing Common Lisp programming on my MacBook Pro. But as with all great starts, this was not without its pitfalls. After many frustrating hours, and questions asked on the #lisp IRC channel, I’ve come to realize that perhaps others may benefit from treading a path already tr
It’s hard for me to think of a more ideal platform for web design than Common Lisp. Imagine having a system that runs indefinitely, with the ability to “snapshot” its running state and restore exactly where you left off, and where updates can be applied live, at functional-level granularity, from anywhere. Oh, and let’s not forget the remote debugging and inspection capabilities! And I thought Vis
The following document describes how to use Carsten Dominik’s excellent org-mode Emacs package after the fashion of a pen-and-paper day planner. For those curious, I was not brought up on time management in the era of the current GTD fad. I started with a hard-bound book filled with daily planning sheets, along with training and books supporting this method. I found it incredibly useful for the th
A journal of technical discovery, and sometimes, just pure amazement. As some one who has enjoyed the Lisp language (in several flavors) for about 15 years now, I wanted to express some of my reactions at recently discovering Haskell, and why it has supplanted Lisp as the apple of my eye. Perhaps it will encourage others to explore this strange, wonderful world, where it looks like some pretty dam
In my pursuit to understand Git, it’s been helpful for me to understand it from the bottom up – rather than look at it only in terms of its high-level commands. And since Git is so beautifully simple when viewed this way, I thought others might be interested to read what I’ve found, and perhaps avoid the pain I went through finding it. The following article offers what I’ve learned on this journey
Git has sometimes been described as a versioning file-system which happens to support the underlying notions of version control. And while most people do simply use Git as a version control system, it remains true that it can be used for other tasks as well. For example, if you ever need to store mutating data in a series of snapshots, Git may be just what you need. It’s fast, efficient, and offer
In my pursuit to understand Git, it’s been helpful for me to understand it from the bottom up — rather than look at it only in terms of its high-level commands. And since Git is so beautifully simple when viewed this way, I thought others might be interested to read what I’ve found, and perhaps avoid the pain I went through finding it. The following article offers what I’ve learned on this journey
This week I decided to convert my Ledger repository over to Git. Previously I’d been using Subversion for about 4 years, and CVS for 1 year before that. There was a brief flirt with Darcs, and Mercurial, but neither ever attracted me enough to convert the repository officially. Why did I choose Git? Actually, I’d looked at Git before, maybe a year ago, and decided it was too complex and funky. But
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