From ... From: Erik Naggum Subject: Re: Free implementations of ANSI (CLtL2) Common Lisp for Windows Date: 1999/01/23 Message-ID: <3126049164241844@naggum.no>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 435867495 References: <36a86b43.11355801@news.origin-it.com> <95BA60D2551449DC.C8E47D296CB66E34.49077599F3120EAA@library-proxy.airnews.net> <36a8ac78.11431518@news.origin-it.com> mail-copies-to: never Organization: Naggum Software; +47 8800 8879; http://www.naggum.no Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp * paul.moore@uk.origin-it.com (Paul Moore) | Thanks for the pointers - I've seen both. Both have limitations on heap | size (unspecified how much, but I don't want to invest time & effort to | find that I can't handle realistic amounts of data) and neither support | building standalone applications (Franz has no compiler, which I'd really | like to have, and Harlequin says the free version "does not support | application delivery". Franz Inc Allegro CL 5.0 Lite offering has no _file_ compiler, but of course it has a compiler. Windows people tend to rip other people off and pirate commercial software and such, so I see very valid reasons why vendors don't want to give away any ability that they would want to pay for if they were legitimate users. the Unix world is very different, with the Linux world somewhere in between, with a strong desire to test things out for real without going through a lot of hassle. as has been suggested, switch to Linux. btw, so-called standalone applications aren't. | I suppose this boils down to the fact that I don't want a "cut down" | version of a commercial product - if I didn't notice the limitations, it | wouldn't make me want to buy the full product (and I don't anticipate | buying any Lisp, for the sort of things I'd do it wouldn't be a good | investment...) if you didn't notice the limitations, what would the difference beween what you want and what you get be? I don't get it. (I presume you want this for non-commercial use -- if you want to sell stuff, there are less comfortable limitations on free software than on commercial software.) if you want a full system, it doesn't cost a noticeable chunk of money, either. #:Erik -- SIGTHTBABW: a signal sent from Unix to its programmers at random intervals to make them remember that There Has To Be A Better Way.