LISP: Difference between revisions
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* [http://allegroserve.sourceforge.net/ AllegroServe]. a Web HTTP/Application Server. Free (LLGPL), made by John Foderaro (Franz Inc.) | * [http://allegroserve.sourceforge.net/ AllegroServe]. a Web HTTP/Application Server. Free (LLGPL), made by John Foderaro (Franz Inc.) | ||
=== Repositories === | |||
* [http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs.cmu.edu/project/ai-repository/ai/0.html CMU Artificial Intelligence Repository] | |||
* See also [[http://www.cliki.net/ CLIKI] | |||
=== Various === | === Various === | ||
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This is totally uncomplete and will remain so. See [http://www.cliki.net/ CLIKI] instead, e.g. | This is totally uncomplete and will remain so. See [http://www.cliki.net/ CLIKI] instead, e.g. | ||
** [http://www.cliki.net/web web] | ** [http://www.cliki.net/web web] | ||
** [ | ** [http://www.cliki.net/AI AI] | ||
* [http://wilbur-rdf.sourceforge.net/ Wilbur Semantic Web Toolkit for CLOS]. Wilbur is Nokia Research Center's toolkit for programming Semantic Web applications that use RDF (as well as XML and/or DAML+OIL), written in Common Lisp. | * [http://wilbur-rdf.sourceforge.net/ Wilbur Semantic Web Toolkit for CLOS]. Wilbur is Nokia Research Center's toolkit for programming Semantic Web applications that use RDF (as well as XML and/or DAML+OIL), written in Common Lisp. | ||
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* [http://pws.prserv.net/James.Anderson/XML/ CL-XML] An XML library for CL. The modules perform parsing and serialization between XML, XML Query, and XML Path expressions and DOM-compatible CLOS instances. | * [http://pws.prserv.net/James.Anderson/XML/ CL-XML] An XML library for CL. The modules perform parsing and serialization between XML, XML Query, and XML Path expressions and DOM-compatible CLOS instances. | ||
== Links == | == Links == | ||
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* [http://lisperati.com/ Lisperati] Funny ''and'' serious. | * [http://lisperati.com/ Lisperati] Funny ''and'' serious. | ||
* [http://www.ifi.unizh.ch/ailab/aiwiki/aiw.cgi Artificial Intelligence Wiki] (University of Zurich). This is mostly focused on AI, but may include some LISP related stuff. | |||
=== Collections of links === | === Collections of links === |
Revision as of 11:10, 11 April 2008
Definition
LISP is a multi-paradigm family of programming languages. It was and is popular in artificial intelligence research, but also for teaching programming fundamentals in elite schools.
“Lisp is a family of computer programming languages with a long history and a distinctive, fully parenthesized syntax. Originally specified in 1958, Lisp is the second-oldest high-level programming language in widespread use today; only Fortran is older. Like Fortran, Lisp has changed a great deal since its early days, and a number of dialects have existed over its history. Today, the most widely known general-purpose Lisp dialects are Common Lisp and Scheme. (Wikipedia, retrieved 17:56, 10 April 2008 (UTC))”
“Common Lisp is well suited to large programming projects and explorative programming. The language has a dynamic semantics which distinguishes it from languages such as C and Ada. It features automatic memory management, an interactive incremental development environment, a module system, a large number of powerful data structures, a large standard library of useful functions, a sophisticated object system supporting multiple inheritance and generic functions, an exception system, user-defined types and a macro system which allows programmers to extend the language.[ http://www.cons.org/cmucl/ CMUCL], retrieved 17:56, 10 April 2008 (UTC)).”
On a personal note: LISP is the only programming language, the main contributor to this Wiki ever liked. Same is true for a special purpose PC I worked with in the late eighties, a Symbolics 3620. It was the future in many ways. I started this page because I do teach some more recent stuff like JavaScript or PHP basics to non-programmers and sometimes (like today) I just wonder why those languages are so ugly and so unreliable compared to what we had 20 years ago and after some googling I found out that LISP and even AI is well alive and maybe even coming back a bit. Maybe I should trash PHP teaching at TECFA and go for Scheme instead :)
Today, there are still several popular flavors of LISP, e.g.
- CommonLISP (the dominant LISP before the 90' "AI winter"
- Scheme
- EmacsLISP (to program the Emacs editor)
Furthermore, there exist libraries for various programming languages and that implement subsets of LISP or Scheme or implement at least some features.
In education
- A large part (or even the majority) of Intelligent tutoring systems have been programmed in LISP or on top of expert system engines programmed in LISP.
- Lisp-based web servers can be used to implement adaptive hypertext systems.
Tutorials and documentation
Short introductions and overviews
- What made LISP different, by Paul Graham, 2002.
- Crossing borders: The beauty of Lisp by Bruce Tate, IBM DeveloperWorks, Feb 2007.
- Lisp (programming language) (Wikipedia)
Beginner's tutorials
- A Quickstart to Common Lisp by Nick Gibson.
Books
- Peter Seibel (2005). Practical Common Lisp, Apress. (free online version of the ISBN 1590592395 book)
- Paul Graham On LISP is a comprehensive study of advanced Lisp techniques, with bottom-up programming as the unifying theme. (Free online version of Prentice Hall, 1993, 432 pages, paperback. ISBN 0130305529).
LISP and web
Software
Common LISP implementations
- CMUCL. a free implementation of the Common Lisp programming language which runs on most major Unix platforms.
- Steel Bank Common Lisp (SBCL) open source / free software Common Lisp implementation. this is a fork of CMUCL. Free and high performance.
- GCL The GNU implementation of Common Lisp.
- Clozure CL is an open source Common Lisp implementation that runs on PowerPC hardware under Mac OS X and LinuxPPC, and on x86-64 hardware under Linux, Mac OS X, and FreeBSD.
Webservers in LISP or Scheme
- CL-HTTP developped at MIT under the lead of J. Mallery. Free (but restricted copyright). The free version runs on various systems and LISPs.
- araneida. Araneida is a fairly small free extensible Web server for SBCL and many other Common Lisp implementations .
- HUNCHENTOOT The Common Lisp web server formerly known as TBNL
- Mod_lisp to run a lisp with Apache.
- AllegroServe. a Web HTTP/Application Server. Free (LLGPL), made by John Foderaro (Franz Inc.)
Repositories
- See also [CLIKI
Various
This is totally uncomplete and will remain so. See CLIKI instead, e.g.
- Wilbur Semantic Web Toolkit for CLOS. Wilbur is Nokia Research Center's toolkit for programming Semantic Web applications that use RDF (as well as XML and/or DAML+OIL), written in Common Lisp.
- wilbur-ext is a small package of extensions
- CL-XML An XML library for CL. The modules perform parsing and serialization between XML, XML Query, and XML Path expressions and DOM-compatible CLOS instances.
Links
- Cliki The common lisp wiki. Probably the best overal resource currently. Sorted by resources type or application domain.
- Lisperati Funny and serious.
- Artificial Intelligence Wiki (University of Zurich). This is mostly focused on AI, but may include some LISP related stuff.
Collections of links
- LISP Links (Paul Graham).