From ... From: Erik Naggum Subject: Re: Help required on Limitations of Lisp Date: 1997/11/09 Message-ID: <3088068138912331@naggum.no>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 288651681 References: <01bced10$f78cf100$5e41cac3@host.utando.com> mail-copies-to: never Organization: Naggum Software; +47 8800 8879; http://www.naggum.no Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp * Hasita Shah | I am a student who has been asked to prepare a report on limitations of | Lisp. However, I have never used Lisp before and cannot get reference | material on it here in Kenya. I suggest you report the limitations of your teacher's pedagogical skills to whoever has the authority to fire him and refund any expenditures you may have accumulated. there are many things that can fruitfully be requested of students with little or no experience or knowledge to report on, in the hopes that throwing a whole class into deep water will eventually let a few survivors make it to land, but I am uncertain both of the nature of those who survive under such conditions and of the usefulness of focusing on the limitations of unknown languages. even after many years of study, it takes bright and conscientious students to be able to distinguish their own limitations from those of the language under study. limitations of a language usually surface in practical use: when the amount of manual labor required to obtain a needed behavior is growing out of proportions, one may be looking at the limitation of a language, whether it be its specification or its implementation, but even then most likely the implementation. not that "the limitations of Lisp" wouldn't be an interesting report, but I would much rather it be prepared by somebody with at least 20 years of experience with the language and the specification, plus at least 5 different implementations, than an ignorant student under pressure. you can still get access to reference material if you're on the Internet. point your browser to . this is the specification for Common Lisp (or, as they point out, a derived product of the specification as published by American National Standards Institute (ANSI)). #\Erik -- if you think this year is "97", _you_ are not "year 2000 compliant". see http://sourcery.naggum.no/emacs/ for GNU Emacs 20-related material.