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  2. Allegro Common Lisp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allegro_Common_Lisp

    It is a dialect of the language Lisp, a commercial software implementation of the language Common Lisp. Allegro CL provides the full American National Standards Institute (ANSI) Common Lisp standard with many extensions, including threads, CLOS streams, CLOS MOP, Unicode, SSL streams, implementations of various Internet protocols, OpenGL interface.

  3. Lisp (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lisp_(programming_language)

    Lisp originally had very few control structures, but many more were added during the language's evolution. (Lisp's original conditional operator, cond, is the precursor to later if-then-else structures.) Programmers in the Scheme dialect often express loops using tail recursion. Scheme's commonality in academic computer science has led some ...

  4. GNU Common Lisp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Common_Lisp

    GNU Common Lisp (GCL) is the GNU Project's ANSI Common Lisp compiler, an evolutionary development of Kyoto Common Lisp. It produces native object code by first generating C code and then calling a C compiler. GCL is the implementation of choice for several large projects including the mathematical tools Maxima, AXIOM, HOL88, and ACL2.

  5. Common Lisp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Lisp

    The CLiki, a Wiki for free and open-source Common Lisp systems running on Unix-like systems. One of the main repositories for free Common Lisp for software is Common-Lisp.net Archived September 27, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. lisp-lang.org has documentation and a showcase of success stories. An overview of the history of Common Lisp: "History".

  6. List of Lisp-family programming languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Lisp-family...

    Statically and dynamically scoped Lisp dialect developed by a loose formation of industrial and academic Lisp users and developers across Europe; the standardizers intended to create a new Lisp "less encumbered by the past" (compared to Common Lisp), and not so minimalist as Scheme, and to integrate the object-oriented programming paradigm well ...

  7. newLISP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NewLISP

    newLISP is a scripting language, a dialect of the Lisp family of programming languages.It was designed and developed by Lutz Mueller. [2] Because of its small resource requirements, newLISP is excellent for embedded systems applications.

  8. OpenLisp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenLisp

    OpenLisp is a programming language in the Lisp family developed by Christian Jullien [1] from Eligis.It conforms [2] [3] [4] to the international standard for ISLISP published jointly by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), ISO/IEC 13816:1997(E), [5] [6] revised to ISO/IEC 13816:2007(E).

  9. Reduce (computer algebra system) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reduce_(computer_algebra...

    REDUCE was open-sourced in December 2008 and is available for free under a modified BSD license on SourceForge. Previously it had cost $695. REDUCE is written entirely in its own Lisp dialect called Standard Lisp, [3] expressed in an ALGOL-like syntax called RLISP that is also used as the basis for REDUCE's user-level language.