The L.i.S.P book and code The exact title of this book stands for "Lisp in Small Pieces". This book covers Lisp, Scheme and other related dialects, their interpretation, semantics and compilation. To sum it up in a few figures: 500 pages, 11 chapters, 11 interpreters and 2 compilers. This book was first written in French. It was published by InterÉditions, under title "Les Langages Lisp". See exac
Google Tech Talk August 17, 2009 ABSTRACT Presented by Daniel L. Weinreb, I will talk about the use of Lisp at ITA Software. Why do we use Lisp? How do we make that work? Why is Lisp suitable for this kind of application? I will also talk about the future of Lisp, which has three tracks: Common Lisp, Scheme, and Clojure. At ITA software, we are building a new airline reservation system, suitable f
I've been following with interest the discussion on how to explain Monads to people. The thing I seem to get hung up on the most is notation. Most of the explanations are rendered in Haskell, which I am not familiar with. I understand the general concepts, but not the details of the syntax, which makes the explanations and examples hard to parse.My question is: is it possible to render and/or expl
Here they are: most of the CS textbooks I have ever written. Full text, freely available, plus machine-readable code. I think that modern IT is more in the problem domain than in the solution domain, i.e.: it has stopped contributing anything beneficial to humanity and is mostly used to cause suffering now. You may think otherwise, though. So go ahead, download my works. Maybe one of them turns ou
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