From ... Path: archiver1.google.com!news1.google.com!newsfeed.stanford.edu!newsfeed1.bredband.com!bredband!uio.no!nntp.uio.no!ifi.uio.no!not-for-mail From: Erik Naggum Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp Subject: Re: How to get a wider audience for CL Date: 31 Aug 2002 04:48:14 +0000 Organization: Naggum Software, Oslo, Norway Lines: 21 Message-ID: <3239758094129769@naggum.no> References: <3D6CE6F9.73A1DD7D@cs.uni-bonn.de> <3239617148698671@naggum.no> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit X-Trace: maud.ifi.uio.no 1030769295 1106 129.240.64.16 (31 Aug 2002 04:48:15 GMT) X-Complaints-To: abuse@ifi.uio.no NNTP-Posting-Date: 31 Aug 2002 04:48:15 GMT Mail-Copies-To: never User-Agent: Gnus/5.09 (Gnus v5.9.0) Emacs/21.2 Xref: archiver1.google.com comp.lang.lisp:39200 * Paolo Amoroso | Are there any particular projects worth working on, or ideas worth thinking | about and experimenting with? Several years ago, I started to write glue code to talk to Unix from CMUCL and then from Allegro CL, and called it clunix. (The people who have taken all the domain names have indeed been true to the intended pronunciation -- clue-nix.) Basically what the Perl, Python, or Ruby people have been doing, but with palatable syntax and abstraction traditions. As for the primary similarity between Unix and Common Lisp, an interactive environment where you can define functions and run them in a shell, I keep wondering why nobody have thought of Common Lisp for the shell. `scsh´ is not a bad idea, but whatever elegance Scheme has appears to have drowned, as it so often does when Scheme is exposed to the real world, like `guile´. -- Erik Naggum, Oslo, Norway Act from reason, and failure makes you rethink and study harder. Act from faith, and failure makes you blame someone and push harder.