This link has been bookmarked by 85 people . It was first bookmarked on 25 Jul 2006, by Zhe sto.
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This book: * Provides an overview of Common Lisp for the working programmer. * Introduces key concepts in an easy-to-read format. * Describes format, typical use, and possible drawbacks of all important Lisp constructs. * Provides practical advice for the construction of Common Lisp programs. * Shows examples of how Common Lisp is best used. * Illustrates and compares features of the most popular Common Lisp systems on desktop computers. * Includes discussion and examples of advanced constructs for iteration, error handling, object oriented programming, graphical user interfaces, and threading. * Supplements Common Lisp reference books and manuals with useful hands-on techniques. * Shows how to find what you need among the thousands of documented and undocumented functions and variables in a typical Common Lisp system.
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06 Feb 06
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03 Feb 06
David Corkingserious stuff - this book is available in print from Amazon and here online - a primer in almost every aspect of Common Lisp
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# Chapter 25 - Connecting Lisp to the Real World Chapter objective: Describe FFI in general, and give examples from actual implementations. Show how to use wrappers to call C++ functions. Show how callbacks allow C programs to call Lisp functions. Give an example using TCP/IP access. * Foreign Function Interfaces let you talk to programs written in "foreign languages" * Would you wrap this, please? * I'll call you back... * Network Interfaces: beyond these four walls # Chapter 26 - Put on a Happy Face: Interface Builders Chapter objective: Discuss event-driven interfaces and GUI builders in general, then show examples from major desktop Common Lisp platforms. Conclude with a discussion of platform-independent Lisp GUIs such as Garnet and CLIM. * Event-driven interfaces * Graphical programming * Example: MCL's Interface Toolkit * Platform-independent interfaces
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