Search the FAQ Archives

3 - A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M
N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z
faqs.org - Internet FAQ Archives

FAQ: Lisp Implementations and Mailing Lists 4/7 [Monthly posting]
Section - [4-5] Commercial Implementations of Other Lisp Dialects

( Part1 - Part2 - Part3 - Part4 - Part5 - Part6 - Part7 - Single Page )
[ Usenet FAQs | Web FAQs | Documents | RFC Index | Airports ]


Top Document: FAQ: Lisp Implementations and Mailing Lists 4/7 [Monthly posting]
Previous Document: [4-4] Free Implementations of Other Lisp Dialects
Next Document: [4-6] What is Dylan?
See reader questions & answers on this topic! - Help others by sharing your knowledge
 Franz Lisp 2.0 runs on the Apple Macintosh, requiring 1mb RAM for the
 interpreter (99ドル) and 2.5mb RAM for the compiler (199ドル). Student prices
 are 60ドル for the interpreter and 110ドル for the interpreter and compiler.
 Includes editor and language reference manual. Complete sources are
 available for 649ドル. The ALJABR symbolic mathematics system costs 249ドル.
 Write to: Fort Pond Research, 15 Fort Pond Road, Acton, MA 01720,
 call 1-508-263-9692, or send mail to order@fpr.com.
 Le-Lisp includes a compiler, color and graphic output, a debugger, a
 pretty printer, performance analysis tools, tracing, and incremental
 execution. Le-Lisp currently runs on Unix, VMS, and Windows 3.1. Note
 that Le-Lisp is neither Common Lisp nor Scheme. Le-Lisp was
 originally developed in 1980 at Inria, the French national computer
 science laboratory, by a team led by Jerome Chailloux for work on VLSI
 design. It was based on several earlier Lisps in the MacLisp family,
 but was not directly derived from MacLisp. Le-Lisp enjoyed a large
 success in the French academic world because it was small, fast, and
 portable, being based on a abstract machine language called LLM3. In
 1983, for example, Le-Lisp ran on Z-80 machines running CP/M. In 1987,
 Ilog was formed as an offshoot of Inria to commercialize and improve
 Le-Lisp and several products which had been developed with it,
 including a portable graphic interface system and an expert system
 shell. Since then, Ilog has continued to grow and expand the use of
 Le-Lisp into industrial markets around the world. Ilog is the largest
 European Lisp vendor, and continues to develop new products and
 markets for Lisp. In 1992, Ilog released the next major version of
 Le-Lisp, Le-Lisp version 16. This version modernizes Le-Lisp for use
 in the industrial world, adding lexical closures and
 special-form-based semantics for static analysis, a new object system
 based on the EuLisp object system (TELOS), an enhanced module system
 for application production, a conservative GC for integration with C
 and C++, and compilation to C for portability and efficiency on a wide
 range of processors. For pricing and other information, write to
 ILOG, 2 Avenue Gallieni, BP 85, 94253 Gentilly Cedex, France, call
 33-1-46-63-66-66, fax 33-1-46-63-15-82, or send email to Jerome
 Chailloux (chaillou@ilog.fr).
 CLISP v6.89 is a library of functions which extends the C programming
 language to include some of the functionality of Lisp. Requires
 ANSI C. Costs 349ドル with no run-time fee.
 Write to Drasch Computer Software, 187 Slade Road, Ashford, CT 06278, 
 or call or fax 203-429-3817.
 Two references in Dr. Dobb's journal on Lisp-style libraries for C
 are: Douglas Chubb, "An Improved Lisp-Style Library for C", Dr. Dobb's
 Jounral #192, September 1992, and Daniel Ozick, "A Lisp-Style Library
 for C", Dr. Dobb's Journal #179:36-48, August 1991. Source is available by
 ftp from various archives, including wuarchive.wustl.edu (MSDOSDDJMAG),
 or ftp://ftp.mv.com/pub/, or the DDJ Forum on Compuserve.
 Lily (LIsp LibrarY) is a C++ class library that lets C++ programmers
 write LISP-style code. Includes some example programs from Winston's
 Lisp book recoded in Lily. Most or all of chapters 17 (Symbolic
 Pattern Matching), 18 (Expert Problem Solving), and 23 (Lisp in Lisp)
 are implemented in the examples. Lily works with GNU G++ (2.4.5) and
 Turbo C++ for Windows. Lily is available by anonymous ftp from
 sunsite.unc.edu:/pub/packages/development/libraries/ [152.2.22.81]
 as lily-0.1.tar.gz. This site is fairly slow; a copy is available from
 the Lisp Utilities collection. For more information, contact 
 Roger Sheldon <sheldon@kong.gsfc.nasa.gov>.
Other Lisps for PCs include: 
 o UO-LISP from Calcode Systems, e-mail:calcode!marti@rand.org
 It comes complete with compiler and interpreter, and is optimised for
 large programs. It is Standard LISP, not Common LISP. They are based
 in Amoroso Place in Venice, CA. 
 o LISP/88 v1.0. Gotten from Norell Data Systems, 3400 Wilshire Blvd,
 Los Angeles, CA 90010, in 1983. They may or may not still exist. 
 o IQLisp. Not a Common Lisp but still very good for PCs - you can
 actually get a lot done in 640K. The lisp itself runs in less than
 128K and every cons cell takes only 6 bytes. Unfortunately that
 makes the 640K (maybe a little more, but certainly no more than 1M)
 limit really hard. It has a byte code compiler which costs extra. 
 This has support for all sorts of PC specific things.
 It costs 175ドル w/o compiler, 275ドル with. 
 Write to: Integral Quality, Box 31970, Seattle, WA 98103,
 call Bob Rorschach, (206) 527-2918 or email rfr@franz.com. 

User Contributions:

Comment about this article, ask questions, or add new information about this topic:




Top Document: FAQ: Lisp Implementations and Mailing Lists 4/7 [Monthly posting]
Previous Document: [4-4] Free Implementations of Other Lisp Dialects
Next Document: [4-6] What is Dylan?

Part1 - Part2 - Part3 - Part4 - Part5 - Part6 - Part7 - Single Page

[ Usenet FAQs | Web FAQs | Documents | RFC Index ]

Send corrections/additions to the FAQ Maintainer:
ai+lisp-faq@cs.cmu.edu





Last Update March 27 2014 @ 02:11 PM


AltStyle によって変換されたページ (->オリジナル) /