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FAQ: Lisp Frequently Asked Questions 1/7 [Monthly posting]
Section - [1-4] Where can I learn about implementing Lisp interpreters and compilers?

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Books about Lisp implementation include:
 1. John Allen
 "Anatomy of Lisp"
 McGraw-Hill, 1978. 446 pages. ISBN 0-07-001115-X
 Discusses some of the fundamental issues involved in
 the implemention of Lisp. 
 2. Samuel Kamin
 "Programming Languages, An Interpreter-Based Approach"
 Addison-Wesley, Reading, Mass., 1990. ISBN 0-201-06824-9
 Includes sources to several interpreters for Lisp-like languages.
 The source for the interpreters in the book is available
 by anonymous FTP from 
 ftp://a.cs.uiuc.edu/pub/kamin/kamin.distr/
 Tim Budd reimplemented the interpreters in C++, and has made
 them available by anonymous ftp from 
 ftp://cs.orst.edu/pub/budd/kamin/
 3. Sharam Hekmatpour
 "Lisp: A Portable Implementation"
 Prentice Hall, 1985. ISBN 0-13-537490-X.
 Describes a portable implementation of a small dynamic
 Lisp interpreter (including C source code). 
 4. Peter Henderson
 "Functional Programming: Application and Implementation"
 Prentice-Hall (Englewood Cliffs, NJ), 1980. 355 pages.
 5. Peter M. Kogge
 "The Architecture of Symbolic Computers"
 McGraw-Hill, 1991. ISBN 0-07-035596-7.
 Includes sections on memory management, the SECD and
 Warren Abstract Machines, and overviews of the various
 Lisp Machine architectures.
 
 6. Daniel P. Friedman, Mitchell Wand, and Christopher T. Haynes
 "Essentials of Programming Languages"
 MIT Press, 1992, 536 pages. ISBN 0-262-06145-7.
 Teaches fundamental concepts of programming language
 design by using small interpreters as examples. Covers
 most of the features of Scheme. Includes a discussion
 of parameter passing techniques, object oriented languages,
 and techniques for transforming interpreters to allow
 their implementation in terms of any low-level language.
 Also discusses scanners, parsers, and the derivation of
 a compiler and virtual machine from an interpreter.
 Includes a few chapters on converting code into a
 continuation passing style.
 Source files available by anonymous ftp from 
 ftp://cs.indiana.edu/pub/eopl/ [129.79.254.191].
 7. Peter Lee, editor, "Topics in Advanced Language Implementation",
 The MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass., 1991.
 Articles relevant to the implementation of functional
 programming languages.
 8. Also see the proceedings of the biannual ACM Lisp and Functional
 Programming conferences, the implementation notes for CMU Common Lisp,
 Norvig's book, and SICP (Abelson & Sussman).
 9. Christian Queinnec
 "Les Langages Lisp"
 InterEditions (in French), 1994. 500 pages.
 ISBN 2-7296-0549-5, 61-2448-1. (?)
 Cambridge University Press (in English), 1996.
 ISBN 0-521-56247-3. 
 
 The book covers Lisp, Scheme and other related dialects,
 their interpretation, semantics and compilation.
 All of the programs described in the book are available by
 anonymous ftp from
 ftp://ftp.inria.fr/INRIA/Projects/icsla/Books/
 For more information, see the book's URL
 file://ftp.inria.fr/INRIA/Projects/icsla/WWW/LiSP.html
 or contact the author at Christian.Queinnec@inria.fr

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