On Thu, 10 Jun 2010 13:14:01 -0700, bolega wrote: > Which is the best implementation of LISP family of languages for real > world programming ? > > http://wiki.alu.org/Implementation > > Kindly pick one from commercial and one from open-source . > > The criteria is : > > libraries, gui interface and builder, libraries for TCP, and evolving > needs. > > Please compare LISP and its virtues with other languages such as > javascript, python etc. > > I put javascript in the context that it is very similar in its > architecture (homoiconic ie same representation for data-structures and > operations, ie hierarchical, which means nested-lists <=> n-ary tree <=> > binary tree <=> linked-list <=> dictionary <=> task-subtask, and > implicitly based on what C calls pointers, and at machine level the > indirect addressing of memory) to lisp family. > > I put python in the context that it has the most extensive libraries and > shares the build-fix virtue of lisp highlighted by Paul Graham in his > books. Python is touted for its rapid prototyping of guis. It syntax > enforces stable format which guards against programmer malice or > sloppiness - so that there is a certain level of legacy code > readability. > > Both have eval but not clear what is the implementation efficiency to > justify the habit of excessively using it. > > Certainly, lisp/scheme are excellent for learning the concepts of > programming languages due to its multi-paradigm nature and readily > available code of the elementary interpreter. > > Is there an IDE for these lispish-scheming languages ? Is there quality > implementation for Eclipse ? Emacs pre-supposes some knowledge of these > so that newbie can get stuck. Also, emacs help is not very good. > > Is there a project whereby the internal help of emacs (analogous to its > man pages) are being continuously being updated AND shared ? I have > never seen updates to the help. Perhaps, the commercial people are doing > it, even from the posts of the newsgroups, but the public distros or > these newsgroups have NEVER made such an announcement. > > Explanations integrated into the help are more important than the books > - its like the wikipedia incorporated into emacs. > > Is there support for the color highlighting of the code by hovering as > on this page ? > > http://community.schemewiki.org/?lexical-scope > > Which book/paper has the briefest minimal example of gui design along > XML nested/hiearchical elements with event-listeners for lisp/scheme ? > > Thanks
if we do all of the above will we also receive the grade & qualification? what exam is it for anyway? -- Finagle's Seventh Law: The perversity of the universe tends toward a maximum. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list