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Timed Common Lisp

ACM SIGART Bulletin, 1996
The two key features of Deliberation Scheduling and Anytime Algorithms are the duration of the computation and the resulting quality. Clearly, quality can be difficult to define and highly dependent on the domain. Duration, on the other hand, seems straightforward: how long the computation takes. But on what processor? Should the processor matter? What
Scott D. Anderson, Paul R. Cohen
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Common Lisp

Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of Lisp, 2008
This paper summarizes a talk given at "Lisp50@OOPSLA," the 50th Anniversary of Lisp workshop, Monday, October 20, 2008, an event co-located with the OOPSLA'08 in Nashville, TN, in which I offered my personal, subjective account of how I came to be involved with Common Lisp and the Common Lisp standard, and of what I learned from the process.The account
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Symbolic superalgebra manipulations using common lisp

Computer Physics Communications, 1990
Abstract We present a description and an implementation of a program in COMMON LISP to perform symbolic computations in a given Lie algebra. Using the general definitions of vector space Lie algebra and enveloping algebra, the program is able to compute commutators, to evaluate similarity transformations and the general Baker-Campbell-Hausdorff ...
Cecchini, R., Tarlini, M.
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dpANS Common Lisp

ACM SIGPLAN Lisp Pointers, 1992
"It sure is big." I have made the rounds proudly showing off my copy of the final document to my friends and colleagues, and this is invariably their first comment. Counting cover sheets, tables of contents, etc.---it's about 1350 pages. It is big---no doubt about that.
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S-1 Common Lisp implementation

Proceedings of the 1982 ACM symposium on LISP and functional programming - LFP '82, 1982
We are developing a Lisp implementation for the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory S-1 Mark IIA computer. The dialect of Lisp is an extension of COMMON Lisp [Steele;1982], a descendant of MacLisp [Moon;1974] and Lisp Machine Lisp [Weinreb;1981]).
Rodney A. Brooks   +2 more
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Einbettung von Standard LISP in COMMON LISP

1989
Im Verlauf der Entwicklung von LISP entstand eine Vielzahl unterschiedlicher Dialekte, die sich erheblich in der Menge der zur Verfugung gestellten Datentypen und Funktionen unterscheiden (vgl. Stoyan [1980]). So findet man zwar bei allen LISP-Dialekten die Datentypen Symbol, ganze Zahl und Liste sowie die Grundfunktionen CAR, CDR, CONS und COND; aber ...
Rüdiger Esser, Elisabeth Feldmar
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Common Lisp Framework

1993
Abstract : The principal goal of the COMMON LISP Framework project was to support Strategic Computing (SC) contractors with a comprehensive, state-of-the- art programming framework for the development and evolution of COMMON LISP programs. The CLF has affected the technical community by shaping both the structure of modern programming environments and ...
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Common Lisp Object System specification

ACM SIGPLAN Notices, 1988
Introduction The Common Lisp Object System is an object-oriented extension to Common Lisp as defined in Common Lisp: The Language, by Guy L. Steele Jr. It is based on generic functions, multiple inheritance, declarative method combination, and a meta-object protocol.
Daniel G. Bobrow   +5 more
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A critique of common LISP

Proceedings of the 1984 ACM Symposium on LISP and functional programming - LFP '84, 1984
A major goal of the COMMON LISP committee was to define a Lisp language with sufficient power and generality that people would be happy to stay within its confines and thus write inherently transportable code. We argue that the resulting language definition is too large for many short-term and medium-term potential applications.
Rodney A. Brooks, Richard P. Gabriel
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An overview of COMMON LISP

Proceedings of the 1982 ACM symposium on LISP and functional programming - LFP '82, 1982
A dialect of LISP called “COMMON LISP” is being cooperatively developed and implemented at several sites. It is a descendant of the MACLISP family of LISP dialects, and is intended to unify the several divergent efforts of the last five years. We first give an extensive history of LISP, particularly of the MACLISP branch, in order to explain in context
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