Chez Scheme is a good choice. For a book, you want Dybvig's "The
Scheme Programming Language"; it's available in dead-tree form or
(free) on-line:
http://www.scheme.com/tspl3/
Peter Drake
http://www.lclark.edu/~drake/
On Dec 12, 2007, at 1:09 AM, Nick Apperson wrote:
I've been (and still am) a die hard supporter of C++, but since I
program in C++ for work (we develop gamelike software) I get tired
of C++ day in and out. I'd also like to push myself to learn some
new things.
Lisp seems to me like a language I could really come to respect. I
run linux (no windows, period) and I am comfortable with command-
line if I need to be. Anyway, I'm trying to figure out what the
best way would be to learn lisp so that I can begin working on a
computer go program in it. I can't even figure out what the right
dielect would be for computer go.
Any of you out there using lisp want to maybe point me in the right
direction for how to learn this language as it applies to writing a
go program? Thanks.
- Nick
_______________________________________________
computer-go mailing list
computer-go@computer-go.org
http://www.computer-go.org/mailman/listinfo/computer-go/
_______________________________________________
computer-go mailing list
computer-go@computer-go.org
http://www.computer-go.org/mailman/listinfo/computer-go/