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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).
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.
Clozure CL (CCL) is a Common Lisp implementation. It implements the full ANSI Common Lisp standard with several extensions ( CLOS MOP , threads, CLOS conditions, CLOS streams, ...). It contains a command line development environment, an experimental integrated development environment (IDE) for Mac OS X using the Hemlock editor, and can also be ...
Steel Bank Common Lisp (SBCL) is a free Common Lisp implementation that features a high-performance native compiler, Unicode support and threading.It is open source software, with a permissive license.
ECL includes a bytecode interpreter and compiler. It can also compile Lisp code to machine code via a C compiler. ECL then compiles Lisp code to C, compiles the C code with a C compiler and can then load the resulting machine code. It is also possible to embed ECL in C programs, and C code into Common Lisp programs. GNU Common Lisp (GCL) The ...
A machine to interpret compact bytecode (which can be emitted from the compiler). This is rarely used now, but was popular in early CMUCL releases because image sizes were drastically reduced at a time where download bandwidth on the Internet was low. A native code compiler named "Python" (not to be confused with the Python programming language ...
CLISP is extremely portable, running on almost all Unix-based operating systems as well as on Microsoft Windows.Although interpreting bytecode is usually slower than running compiled native binaries, this is not always a major issue (especially in applications like Web development where I/O is the bottleneck).
Java, Lisp Any Free, BSD: Yes [21] Easy-ISLisp [22] Kenichi Sasagawa Yes Interpreter, compiles to C C, Lisp Linux, MacOS, OpenBSD Free, BSD: Yes [23] Isle ISLISP KIM Taegyoon No Compiler Common Lisp: OSes on which Common Lisp operates (including Linux and Windows) Free, Unlicense: Yes [24]