Re: on the evolution of lisp

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Sujet : Re: on the evolution of lisp
De : HenHanna (at) *nospam* devnull.tb (HenHanna)
Groupes : comp.lang.lisp
Date : 16. Jun 2024, 02:59:11
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <v4ldd0$3mt2i$2@dont-email.me>
References : 1
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 2/2/2024 7:52 AM, Julieta Shem wrote:
I read
 --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
The evolution of Lisp
Guy L. Steele, Richard P. Gabriel
History of programming languages---II
January 1996
Pages 233–330
https://doi.org/10.1145/234286.1057818
--8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
 Actually I read a longer version that I found somewhere.  I suppose that
was the draft from which the published version was derived.  I'd hope
that I got a little more details than I would have otherwise.
 Very interesting read.
 (*) A small language is easy to learn
 --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
   Extensive work on Scheme implementations was carried on at Yale and
   later at MIT by Jonathan Rees, Norman Adams, and others. This resulted
   in the dialect of Scheme known as T; [...] The goal was to be a simple
   dialect with an especially efficient implementation [Rees, 1982]:
        T centers around a small core language, free of complicated
       features, thus easy to learn. [...]
--8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
 In Kent Pitman's ``dpANS Common Lisp'', we find
    Who says people have to learn it all at once? [...]  Imagine what
   would have happened if Mathematics were constrained such that
   mathematicians could use only those concepts that could be taught in
   First Grade.
 That was nice. :-)
 Thanks to whoever mentioned this paper by Kent Pitman here recently.  I
think it was Axel Reichert.  Thanks!
 (*) Alan Bawden
 Hey, Alan!  I didn't know who you were.  (I like not to know who I'm
talking to.)  The document spoke very highly of you.  It first mentions
you were in the Commmon Lisp Group and eventually calls you a
backquote-meister.  Impressive!
    The backquote syntax was particularly powerful when nested.  This
   occurred primarily within macro-defining macros; because such were
   coded primarily by wizards, the ability to write and interpret nested
   backquote expressions was soon surrounded by a certain mystique.  Alan
   Bawden of MIT acquired a particular reputation as backquote-meister in
   the early days of the Lisp Machine.
 We also learned about synctatic closures.  Very cool.
       yes, he is the backquote-meister  --- Checkout his paper on it.

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