LISP in small pieces. Christian Queinnec, Kathleen Callaway

LISP in small pieces


LISP.in.small.pieces.pdf
ISBN: 0521562473,9780521562478 | 526 pages | 14 Mb


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LISP in small pieces Christian Queinnec, Kathleen Callaway
Publisher: Cambridge University Press




See "http://daly.axiom-developer.org/litprog.html" for an example using HTML. It seems to me that there is a clear connection with reflective towers, e.g. As discussed in extraordinary detail in Lisp in Small Pieces, but I don't recall whether the latter (or anything else) examines the connection. First, you can take a small piece of cereal like a Cheerio and put it on the roof of your mouth, just behind your teeth. In other words, it is not really about truly building models. I remember reading in Lisp In Small Pieces that CDR is statistically more often encountered that CAR So my final answer is "less CARs than CDRs in the source code of PLT". €�One of my New Year's goals is to re-read Lisp in Small Pieces and implement all 11 interpreters and 2 compilers. See "Lisp in Small Pieces" for a great example. The Hawaii test is the key criteria to measure whether your literate program is successful. September 6, 2007 at 3:23 PM · Robby said. There are exercises you can do to get rid of your lisp. Lisp in Small Pieces is like that; it's more about a cute way to teach things that bends the mind than having fun in exploring design trade-offs.