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Jun 7, 2021 - Common Lisp
Common Lisp
Common Lisp is a general-purpose programming language in the Lisp language family. Its syntax is defined on top of s-expressions, however it can be extended through the use of reader macros. It supports compile-time meta-programming through the use of macros. It supports the OOP paradigm through the Common Lisp Object System. The API upon which CLOS is implemented is exposed to the programmer so they can extent the object system. This API is refered as the Meta-Object Protocol. There are multiple implementations available: SBCL, which generates fast code, CCL, which compiles code fast, ABCL, which runs on the JVM, JSCL which runs on Node, and the browser, etc.
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The example in the section on walking/traversing directories lists the arguments of the uiop:collect-sub*directories
It would be good to reorder the list in the order of this function's arguments like so:
- a directory
- a collectp function
- a recursep function
- a collector function
That will make the example more readable
dead links ahoy
The documentation for advise ([http://ccl.clozure.com/docs/ccl.html#advising]) is buggy. Instead of arglist both examples should say (car arglist).
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Jan 8, 2021 - Shell
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Apr 21, 2021 - Common Lisp
clim-tos has a portable function render-bezier-curve which computes points that are further passed to medium-draw-polygon*. Investigate whether porting it to McCLIM as a default function is a viable option.
It is hard to debug these hash table monstrosities without some visualization. Maybe we can visualize them with a Hasse diagram.
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Jul 9, 2020 - JavaScript
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Apr 15, 2020 - Common Lisp
It looks like the upcoming sbcl 2.0.1 release includes changes to move certain symbols out of cl:*features* and into sb-impl:+internal-features+ [[1]]. IIUC, any "non-public" features will continue to work (for now), but issue a warning [[2]].
I haven't tested it, but it looks like we use at least one such soon-to-be-deprecated feature, namely avx2. We should figure out what to do about
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Created by X3J13
Released 1984
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