LISP in small pieces. Christian Queinnec, Kathleen Callaway

LISP in small pieces


LISP.in.small.pieces.pdf
ISBN: 0521562473,9780521562478 | 526 pages | 14 Mb


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LISP in small pieces Christian Queinnec, Kathleen Callaway
Publisher: Cambridge University Press




Subscribe to comments with RSS. See "Lisp in Small Pieces" for a great example. Do any of these topics have better books? What books have people read and found to be really good? Kamin, “Programming Languages, An Interpreter-Based Approach”, Addison-Wesley, Reading, Mass., 1990. The Hawaii test is the key criteria to measure whether your literate program is successful. See “Lisp in Small Pieces” or “Implementing Elliptic Curve Cryptography” for real literate programs as books. It's not just an aesthetic consideration. €�The Anatomy of Lisp” by John Allen. See "http://daly.axiom-developer.org/litprog.html" for an example using HTML. A guy I know ordered it and he reports it's a full, normal copy. I have also read good reviews on Lisp in small pieces and Advanced C programming. For some reason, amazon.ca has Lisp in Small Pieces by Christian Queinnec for CDN$3.95. As discussed in extraordinary detail in Lisp in Small Pieces, but I don't recall whether the latter (or anything else) examines the connection. What features from R5RS would have to be removed if one wanted a referentially transparent scheme? I have developed what I call the “Hawaii” test for a good literate program. Christian Queinnec, Lisp in Small Pieces. It seems to me that there is a clear connection with reflective towers, e.g. Queinnec's “Lisp in Small Pieces” covers the implementation implications of the choice between Lisp-1 and Lisp-2. In Lisp In Small Pieces, Christian states that assignment, side-effects, and continuations break referential transparency.