From: Mark Kantrowitz
Subject: FAQ: Lisp Frequently Asked Questions 1/7 [Monthly posting]
Date: 
Message-ID: <lisp_1.faq_758494371@cs.cmu.edu>
Archive-name: lisp-faq/part1
Last-Modified: Thu Dec 16 17:05:40 1993 by Mark Kantrowitz
Version: 1.41

;;; ****************************************************************
;;; Answers to Frequently Asked Questions about Lisp ***************
;;; ****************************************************************
;;; Written by Mark Kantrowitz and Barry Margolin
;;; lisp_1.faq -- 60430 bytes

This post contains Part 1 of the Lisp FAQ.

If you think of questions that are appropriate for this FAQ, or would
like to improve an answer, please send email to us at ········@think.com.

Note that the lisp-faq mailing list is for discussion of the content
of the FAQ posting only.  It is not the place to ask questions about Lisp;
use either the ···········@ai.sri.com mailing list or the
comp.lang.lisp newsgroup for that.  If a question appears frequently
in one of those forums, it will get added to the FAQ list.

There are currently seven parts to the Lisp FAQ:
   1. Introductory Matter and Bibliography of Introductions and References
   2. General Questions
   3. Common Programming Pitfalls
   4. Lisp Implementations and Mailing Lists
   5. Object-oriented Programming in Lisp
   6. FTP Archives and Resources
   7. Lisp Window Systems and GUIs
All parts are posted to comp.lang.lisp. Part 5 is cross-posted to the
comp.lang.clos newsgroup. 

Topics Covered (Part 1):

  [1-0]	  What is the purpose of this newsgroup?
  [1-1]	  What is the difference between Scheme and Common Lisp?
  [1-2]	  What documentation is available on Lisp? How can I learn Lisp?
  [1-3]	  How can I improve my Lisp programming style and coding efficiency?
  [1-4]	  Where can I learn about implementing Lisp interpreters and compilers?
  [1-5]	  What does CLOS, PCL, X3J13, CAR, CDR, ... mean? 
  [1-6]	  Lisp Job Postings

Topics Covered (Part 2):

  [2-1]	  Is there a GNU-Emacs interface to Lisp?
  [2-2]	  When should I use a hash table instead of an association list?
  [2-3]	  What is the equivalent of EXPLODE and IMPLODE in Common Lisp?
  [2-4]	  Is Lisp inherently slower than more conventional languages such as C?
  [2-5]	  Why does Common Lisp have "#'"?
  [2-6]	  How do I call non-Lisp functions from Lisp?
  [2-7]	  Can I call Lisp functions from other languages?
  [2-8]	  I want to call a function in a package that might not exist at
	  compile time. How do I do this?  
  [2-9]	  What is CDR-coding?
  [2-10]  What is garbage collection?
  [2-11]  How do I save an executable image of my loaded Lisp system?
	  How do I run a Unix command in my Lisp?
  [2-12]  I'm porting some code from a Symbolics Lisp machine to some
	  other platform, and there are strange characters in the code.
	  What do they mean?  
  [2-13]  History: Where did Lisp come from?
  [2-14]  How do I find the argument list of a function?
	  How do I get the function name from a function object?
  [2-15]  How can I have two Lisp processes communicate via unix sockets?
  [2-16]  How can I create a stream that acts like UNIX's /dev/null
	  (i.e., gobbles any output and immediately signals EOF on
	  input operations)?
  [2-17]  Read-time conditionalization of code (#+ #- and *features*)
  [2-18]  What reader macro characters are used in major Lisp systems?
  [2-19]  How do I determine if a file is a directory or not? 
          How do I get the current directory name from within a Lisp 
          program? Is there any way to create a directory?
  [2-20]  What is a "Lisp Machine" (LISPM)?

Common Pitfalls (Part 3):

  [3-0]	 Why does (READ-FROM-STRING "foobar" :START 3) return FOOBAR
	 instead of BAR?  
  [3-1]	 Why can't it deduce from (READ-FROM-STRING "foobar" :START 3)
	 that the intent is to specify the START keyword parameter
	 rather than the EOF-ERROR-P and EOF-VALUE optional parameters?	  
  [3-2]	 Why can't I apply #'AND and #'OR?
  [3-3]	 I used a destructive function (e.g. DELETE, SORT), but it
	 didn't seem to work.  Why? 
  [3-4]	 After I NREVERSE a list, it's only one element long.  After I
	 SORT a list, it's missing things.  What happened? 
  [3-5]	 Why does (READ-LINE) return "" immediately instead of waiting
	 for me to type a line?	 
  [3-6]	 I typed a form to the read-eval-print loop, but nothing happened. Why?
  [3-7]	 DEFMACRO doesn't seem to work.
	 When I compile my file, LISP warns me that my macros are undefined
	 functions, or complains "Attempt to call <function> which is 
	 defined as a macro.
  [3-8]	 Name conflict errors are driving me crazy! (EXPORT, packages)
  [3-9]	 Closures don't seem to work properly when referring to the
	 iteration variable in DOLIST, DOTIMES, DO and LOOP.
  [3-10] What is the difference between FUNCALL and APPLY?
  [3-11] Miscellaneous things to consider when debugging code.
  [3-12] When is it right to use EVAL?
  [3-13] Why does my program's behavior change each time I use it?
  [3-14] When producing formatted output in Lisp, where should you put the
	 newlines (e.g., before or after the line, FRESH-LINE vs TERPRI,
	 ~& vs ~% in FORMAT)?
  [3-15] I'm using DO to do some iteration, but it doesn't terminate. 
  [3-16] My program works when interpreted but not when compiled!

Lisp Implementations and Mailing Lists (Part 4):

  [4-0]	  Free Common Lisp implementations.
  [4-1]	  Commercial Common Lisp implementations.
  [4-1a]  Lisp-to-C translators
  [4-2]	  Scheme Implementations
  [4-4]	  Free Implementations of Other Lisp Dialects
  [4-5]	  Commercial Implementations of Other Lisp Dialects
  [4-6]	  What is Dylan?
  [4-7]	  What is Pearl Common Lisp?
  [4-9]	  What Lisp-related discussion groups and mailing lists exist?
  [4-10]  ANSI Common Lisp -- Where can I get a copy of the draft standard?

Object-oriented Programming in Lisp (Part 5):

  [5-0]	  What is CLOS (PCL) and where can I get it?
	  How do you pronounce CLOS?
  [5-1]	  What documentation is available about object-oriented
	  programming in Lisp?	
  [5-2]	  How do I write a function that can access defstruct slots by
	  name?	 I would like to write something like 
	  (STRUCTURE-SLOT <object> '<slot-name>).   
  [5-3]	  How can I list all the CLOS instances in a class?
  [5-4]	  How can I store data and CLOS instances (with possibly circular
	  references) on disk so that they may be retrieved at some later
	  time?
  [5-5]	  Given the name of a class, how can I get the names of its slots?
  [5-6]	  Free CLOS software.

FTP Resources (Part 6):

  [6-0] General information about FTP Resources for Lisp
  [6-1] Repositories of Lisp Software
  [6-3] Publicly Redistributable Lisp Software
  [6-6] Formatting code in LaTeX
  [6-7] Where can I get an implementation of Prolog in Lisp?

Lisp Window Systems and GUIs (Part 7):
  [7-1] How can I use the X Window System or other GUIs from Lisp?
  [7-2] What Graphers/Browsers are available?

Search for \[#\] to get to question number # quickly.

Recent Changes:

;;; 1.39:
;;; 13-OCT-93 mk    Updated Blackboard Technology phone and address.
;;; 13-OCT-93 mk    Acknowledge Xerox PARC's contribution in the CLIM entry in
;;;                 [7-1].
;;; 13-OCT-93 mk    Added [2-18] about dispatching macro characters.
;;; 20-OCT-93 mk    Added clarification to [3-0].
;;; 26-OCT-93 mk    Added entry on Powerlisp (shareware Lisp for Mac) to [4-0].
;;; 28-OCT-93 mk    Added note about rehash-after-gc to [2-2].
;;;
;;; 1.40:
;;; 15-NOV-93 mk    Updated FOCL entry in part 6.
;;;
;;; 1.41:
;;; 16-DEC-93 mk    Changed export.lcs.mit.edu to ftp.x.org in many places in
;;;                 part 7.
;;; 16-DEC-93 mk    Updated entry on Franz's emacs interface in [2-1].
;;; 22-DEC-93 mk    Added note about CLX manuals to CLX entry.
;;; 22-DEC-93 mk    Updated CORBA entry in part 5. Spec no longer free.
;;; 22-DEC-93 mk    Added note about Sybase SQL interface for CLISP.
;;; 22-DEC-93 mk    Added entry on Graham's "On Lisp" book.
;;; 24-DEC-93 mk    Added entry on E2C (EuLisp->C) in part 4.
;;; 27-DEC-93 mk    Added [2-19] about directory-p. Merged in parts of [2-11].
;;; 27-DEC-93 mk    Added entry on LILY (C++ library with a lispish style) to
;;;                 part 4.
;;; 28-DEC-93 km    Added entry on SEQUEL (efficient Lisp program generator and
;;;                 ATP system) to part 6.
;;; 29-DEC-93 mk    Expertelligence no longer distributes Procyon CL.
;;; 29-DEC-93 mk    Deleted Scientia email address -- bounces.
;;; 29-DEC-93 mk    Added source of Gabriel & Steele's "Evolution of Lisp"
;;;                 article to [2-13].
;;; 12-JAN-94 mk    Updated [4-10].
;;; 12-JAN-94 mk    Added entry on CLASP to part 6.
;;; 13-JAN-94 mk    Added [2-20] What is a "Lisp Machine" (LISPM)? derived from
;;;                 a post by Arthur Pendragon.
;;; 13-JAN-94 mk    Errata now available for Shapiro's book.


Introduction:

Certain questions and topics come up frequently in the various network
discussion groups devoted to and related to Lisp.  This file/article is
an attempt to gather these questions and their answers into a convenient
reference for Lisp programmers.	 It (or a reference to it) is posted
periodically.  The hope is that this will cut down on the user time and
network bandwidth used to post, read and respond to the same questions
over and over, as well as providing education by answering questions
some readers may not even have thought to ask.

This is not a Lisp tutorial, nor is it an exhaustive list of all Lisp
intricacies.  Lisp is a very powerful and expressive language, but with
that power comes many complexities.  This list attempts to address the
ones that average Lisp programmers are likely to encounter.  If you are
new to Lisp, see the answer to the question "How can I learn Lisp?".

The latest version of this file is available via anonymous FTP from CMU
and Thinking Machines: 

   To obtain the files from CMU, connect by anonymous ftp to any CMU CS
   machine (e.g., ftp.cs.cmu.edu [128.2.206.173]), using username
   "anonymous" and password ·····@host". The files lisp_1.faq,
   lisp_2.faq, lisp_3.faq, lisp_4.faq, lisp_5.faq, lisp_6.faq and
   lisp_7.faq are located in the directory 
       /afs/cs.cmu.edu/project/ai-repository/ai/pubs/faqs/lisp/
   [Note: You must cd to this directory in one atomic operation, as
   some of the superior directories on the path are protected from
   access by anonymous ftp.] If your site runs the Andrew File System,
   you can just cp the files directly without bothering with FTP.

   To obtain the files from Thinking Machines, ftp them from ftp.think.com,
   in the directory /public/think/lisp/. The file faq.text contains all the
   parts of the FAQ in one file. In addition, specific versions of the FAQ
   are available as faq-<version>.text.

The FAQ postings are also archived in the periodic posting archive on
rtfm.mit.edu [18.70.0.209]. Look in the anonymous ftp directory
/pub/usenet/news.answers/ in the subdirectory lisp-faq/. If you do not
have anonymous ftp access, you can access the archive by mail server
as well.  Send an E-mail message to ···········@rtfm.mit.edu
with "help" and "index" in the body on separate lines for more
information.

Unless otherwise specified, the Lisp dialect referred to is Common Lisp,
as defined by "Common Lisp: the Language" (aka "CLtL1") as well as
corrections (but not enhancements) from "Common Lisp: the Language, 2nd
Edition" (aka "CLtL2"), both by Guy L. Steele, Jr. and published by
Digital Press. Note that CLtL2 is NOT an official specification for
the language; ANSI Committee X3J13 is preparing such a specification.
See question [4-10] for information on the status of the ANSI
specification for Common Lisp. Enhancements such as CLOS, conditions,
and the LOOP macro will be referred to separately.

----------------------------------------------------------------
Subject: [1-0] What is the purpose of this newsgroup?

The newsgroup comp.lang.lisp exists for general discussion of
topics related to the programming language Lisp. For example, possible
topics can include (but are not necessarily limited to):
   announcements of Lisp books and products
   discussion of programs and utilities written in Lisp
   discussion of portability issues
   questions about possible bugs in Lisp implementations
   problems porting an implementation to some architecture
Postings should be of general interest to the Lisp community. See also
question [4-9]. Postings asking for solutions to homework problems are
inappropriate. 

Every so often, somebody posts an inflammatory message, such as
   My programming language is better than yours (Lisp vs. C/Prolog/Scheme). 
   Loop (or Series) should/shouldn't be part of the language.
These "religious" issues serve no real purpose other than to waste
bandwidth. If you feel the urge to respond to such a post, please do
so through a private e-mail message. 

Questions about object oriented programming in Lisp should be directed
to the newsgroup comp.lang.clos. Similarly, questions about the
programming language Scheme should be directed to the newsgroup
comp.lang.scheme. Discussion of functional programming language issues
should be directed to the newsgroup comp.lang.functional. Discussion
of AI programs implemented in Lisp should sometimes be cross-posted to
the newsgroup comp.ai.

----------------------------------------------------------------
Subject: [1-1] What is the difference between Scheme and Common Lisp?

Scheme is a dialect of Lisp that stresses conceptual elegance and
simplicity. It is specified in R4RS and IEEE standard P1178. (See
the Scheme FAQ for details on standards for Scheme.) Scheme is much
smaller than Common Lisp; the specification is about 50 pages,
compared to Common Lisp's 1300 page draft standard. (See question
[4-10] for details on standards for Common Lisp.) Advocates of Scheme
often find it amusing that the Scheme standard is shorter than the
index to CLtL2. 

Scheme is often used in computer science curricula and programming
language research, due to its ability to represent many programming
abstractions with its simple primitives. Common Lisp is often used for
real world programming because of its large library of utility
functions, a standard object-oriented programming facility (CLOS), and
a sophisticated condition handling system.

See the Scheme FAQ for information about object-oriented programming
in Scheme. 

In Common Lisp, a simple program would look something like the
following:

   (defun fact (n)
     (if (< n 2)
	 1
	 (* n (fact (1- n)))))

In Scheme, the equivalent program would like like this:

   (define fact
     (lambda (n)
       (if (< n 2)
	   1
	 (* n (fact (- n 1))))))

Experienced Lisp programmers might write this program as follows in order
to allow it to run in constant space:

   (defun fact (n)
     (labels ((tail-recursive-fact (counter accumulator)
		(if (> counter n)
		    accumulator
		    (tail-recursive-fact (1+ counter)
					 (* counter accumulator)))))
       (tail-recursive-fact 1 1)))

Whereas in Scheme the same computation could be written as follows:

   (define fact
     (lambda (n)
       (letrec ((tail-recursive-fact
		 (lambda (counter accumulator)
		   (if (> counter n)
		       accumulator
		     (tail-recursive-fact (+ counter 1)
					  (* counter accumulator))))))
	       (tail-recursive-fact 1 1))))

or perhaps (using IEEE named LETs):

   (define fact
     (lambda (n)
       (let loop ((counter n)
		  (accumulator 1))
	    (if (< counter 2)
		accumulator
	      (loop (- counter 1)
		    (* accumulator counter))))))

Some Schemes allow one to use the syntax (define (fact n) ...) instead
of (define fact (lambda (n) ...)).

----------------------------------------------------------------
Subject: [1-2] What documentation is available on Lisp? 
	       How can I learn Lisp?

There are several good Lisp introductions and tutorials:

   1. David S. Touretzky
      "Common Lisp: A Gentle Introduction to Symbolic Computation"
      Benjamin/Cummings Publishers, Redwood City, CA, 1990. 592 pages.
      ISBN 0-8053-0492-4. 
	   Perhaps the best tutorial introduction to the language. It has
	   clear and correct explanations, and covers some fairly advanced
	   topics. The book is an updated Common Lisp version of the 1984
	   edition published by Harper and Row Publishers. 

	   Three free Lisp educational tools which were used in the book --
	   Evaltrace, DTRACE and SDRAW -- are available by anonymous ftp from
	   b.gp.cs.cmu.edu:/usr/dst/public/{lisp,evaltrace}. Evaltrace is a
	   graphical notation for explaining how evaluation works and is
	   described in "Visualizing Evaluation in Applicative Languages" by
	   David S. Touretzky and Peter Lee, CACM 45-59, October 1992. DTRACE
	   is a "detailed trace" which provides more information than the 
	   tracing tools provided with most Common Lisp implementations. SDRAW
	   is a read-eval-draw loop that evaluates Lisp expressions
	   and draws the result as a cons cell diagram (for both X11 and ascii
	   terminals). Also available is PPMX, a tool for pretty printing
	   macro expansions.

   2. Robert Wilensky
      "Common LISPcraft"
      W. W. Norton, 1986. 500 pages. ISBN 0-393-95544-3.

   3. Wade L. Hennessey 
      "Common Lisp"
      McGraw-Hill, 1989. 395 pages.
	   Fairly good, but jumps back and forth from the simple to the
	   complex rather quickly, with no clear progression in difficulty.

   4. Laurent Siklossy
      "Let's Talk LISP"
      Prentice-Hall, NJ, 1976. 237 pages.
	   Good introduction, but quite out of date.

   5. Stuart C. Shapiro
      "Common Lisp: An Interactive Approach"
      Computer Science Press/W.H. Freeman, New York, 1992.
      ISBN 0-7167-8218-9
         The errata for the book may be obtained by anonymous ftp from
         ftp.cs.buffalo.edu:users/shapiro/clerrata.ps

   6. Paul Grahm
      On Lisp: Advanced Techniques for Common Lisp
      Prentice Hall, 1993.

Other introductions to Lisp include:

   1. A. A. Berk.
      "LISP, The Language of Artificial Intelligence"
      Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1985. 160 pages.

   2. Paul Y. Gloess.
      "An Alfred handy guide to Understanding LISP"
      Alfred Publishers (Sherman Oaks, CA), 1982. 64 pages.

   3. Ward D. Maurer.
      "The Programmer's Introduction to LISP"
      American Elsevier, 1972. 112 pages.

   4. Hank Bromley and Richard Lamson.
      "LISP Lore: A Guide to Programming the LISP Machine"
      Kluwer Academic (Boston), 1987. 337 pages.

   5. Sharam Hekmatpour.
      "Introduction to LISP and Symbol Manipulation"
      Prentice Hall (New York), 1988. 303 pages.

   6. Deborah G. Tatar
      "A programmer's guide to Common Lisp"
      Digital Press, 1987. 327 pages. ISBN 0-932376-87-8.
	   Good introduction on Common Lisp for programmers familiar
	   with other programming languages, such as FORTRAN, PASCAL, or C.

   7. Timothy Koschmann
      "The Common Lisp Companion"
      John Wiley & Sons, 1990. ISBN 0-471-503-8-8.
	   Targeted for those with some programming experience who wish to 
	   learn draft-ANSI Common Lisp, including CLOS and the CL condition 
	   system. Examples progress incrementally from simple numerical 
	   calculation all the way to a logic-programming extension to CL.
  
More advanced introductions to Lisp and its use in Artificial
Intelligence include:

   1. Peter Norvig.
      "Paradigms of AI Programming: Case Studies in Common Lisp"
      Morgan Kaufmann, 1992. 946 pages. ISBN 1-55860-191-0.

	Provides an in-depth exposition of advanced AI programming techniques
	and includes large-scale detailed examples. The book is the most
	advanced AI/Common-Lisp programming text and reference currently
	available, and hence is not for the complete novice.  It focuses on the
	programming techniques necessary for building large AI systems,
	including object-oriented programming, and has a strong performance
	orientation.

	The text is marked by its use of "non-toy" examples to illustrate the
	techniques. All of the examples are written in Common Lisp, and copies
	of the source code are available by anonymous ftp from
	unix.sri.com:pub/norvig and on disk in Macintosh or DOS format from
	the publisher. Some of the techniques described include rule-based
	pattern matching (GPS, Eliza, a subset of Macsyma, the Emycin expert
	system shell), constraint propagation and backtracking (Waltz
	line-labelling), alpha-beta search (Othello), natural language
	processing (top-down, bottom-up and chart parsing), logic-programming
	(unification and Prolog), interpreters and compilers for Scheme, and
	object-oriented programming (CLOS).

	The examples are also used to illustrate good programming style and
	efficiency. There is a guide to trouble-shooting and debugging Lisp
	programs, a style guide, and a discussion of portability problems.
	Some of the efficiency techniques described include memoization,
	data indexing, compilation, delaying computation, proper use of
	declarations, avoiding garbage collection, and choosing and using the
	correct data structure.

	The book also serves as an advanced introduction to Common Lisp, with
	sections on the Loop macro, CLOS and sequences, and some coverage of 
	error handling, series, and the package facility.

   2. Eugene Charniak, Christopher K. Riesbeck, Drew V. McDermott
      and James R. Meehan.
      "Artificial Intelligence Programming", 2nd edition.
      Lawrence Erlbaum Associates (Hillsdale, NJ), 1987. 533 pages.
	   Provides many nice code fragments, all of which are written
	   in Common Lisp. The first half of the book covers topics
	   like macros, the reader, data structures, control structures,
	   and defstructs. The second half of the book describes
	   programming techniques specific to AI, such as
	   discrimination nets, production systems, deductive database
	   retrieval, logic programming, and truth maintenance.

   3. Patrick H. Winston and Berthold K. P. Horn.
      "LISP", 3rd edition.
      Addison-Wesley (Reading, MA), 1989. 611 pages. ISBN 0-201-08319-1
	   Covers the basic concepts of the language, but also gives a lot
	   of detail about programming AI topics such as rule-based expert
	   systems, forward chaining, interpreting transition trees, 
	   compiling transition trees, object oriented programming,
	   and finding patterns in images. Not a tutorial. Has many
	   good examples. Source code for the examples is available by
	   anonymous ftp from ftp.ai.mit.edu:/pub/lisp3/. More
	   detailed versions are in /pub/ai3/. (The code runs in
	   Lucid, Allegro, KCL, GCLisp, MCL, Symbolics Genera. Send mail
	   with subject line "help" to ···@ai.mit.edu for more information.)

   4. John R. Anderson, Albert T. Corbett, and Brian J. Reiser.
      "Essential LISP"
      Addison-Wesley (Reading, MA), 1987. 352 pages.
	   Concentrates on how to use Lisp with iteration and recursion.

   5. Robert D. Cameron and Anthony H. Dixon
      "Symbolic Computing with Lisp"
      Prentice-Hall, 1992, 326 pages. ISBN 0-13-877846-9.
	   The book is intended primarily as a third-year computer science
	   text. In terms of programming techniques, it emphasizes recursion
	   and induction, data abstraction, grammar-based definition of Lisp
	   data structures and functional programming style. It uses
	   two Lisp languages: 
		(1) a purely functional subset of Lisp called Small Lisp and
		(2) Common Lisp.
	   An MS-DOS interpreter for Small Lisp (including source) is
	   provided with the book.  It considers applications of Lisp
	   to formal symbolic data domains: algebraic expressions,
	   logical formulas, grammars and programming languages. 

   6. Hasemer and Domingue.
      "Common Lisp Programming for Artificial Intelligence"
      Addison-Wesley, 1989.

   7. Steven Tanimoto
      "The Elements of Artificial Intelligence: An Introduction Using Lisp"
      Computer Science Press, Rockville, MD, 1987, 530 pages.

   8. Patrick R. Harrison
      "Common Lisp and Artificial Intelligence"
      Prentice Hall, Englewood Clifs, NJ, 1990. 244 pages. ISBN 0-13-155243.

   9. Paul Graham
      "On Lisp: Advanced Techniques for Common Lisp"
      Prentice Hall, Englewood Clifs, NJ, 1994. ISBN 0-13-030552-9.
         Emphasizes a bottom-up style of writing programs, which he
         claims is natural in Lisp and has advantages over the
         traditional way of writing programs in C and Pascal.
         Also has in-depth sections on writing macros.

General Lisp reference books include:

   1. Guy L. Steele
      "Common Lisp: The Language" [CLtL1]
      Digital Press, 1984. 465 pages. ISBN 0-932376-41-X.

   2. Guy L. Steele
      "Common Lisp: The Language, 2nd Edition" [CLtL2]
      Digital Press, 1990. 1029 pages. ISBN 1-55558-041-6.

   3. Franz Inc. 
      "Common Lisp: The Reference"
      Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA 1988. ISBN 0-201-11458-5
	   Entries on Lisp (CLtL1) functions in alphabetical order.

Lisp periodicals include:
	
   1. LISP Pointers.
      Published by ACM SIGPLAN six times a year. Volume 1, Number 1
      was April-May 1987. 
      Subscriptions: ACM Members $12; ACM Student Members $7; Non-ACM
      members $25. Mail checks payable to the ACM to ACM Inc., PO Box
      12115, Church Street Station, New York, NY 10249.

   2. LISP and Symbolic Computation, Kluwer Academic Press. Volume 1
      was published in 1989. (···@lucid.com is the editor).  ISSN 0892-4635.
      Subscriptions: Institutions $169; Individuals $80. Add $8 for
      air mail. Kluwer Academic Publishers, PO Box 322, 3300 AH Dordrecht, 
      The Netherlands, or Kluwer Academic Publishers, PO Box 358, Accord
      Station, Hingham, MA 02018-0358. 

      A full table of contents of all published issues, aims and scope, and
      instructions for authors are available by anonymous ftp from
      world.std.com in the files Kluwer/journals/lisp.toc and
      Kluwer/journals/lisp.inf.

   3. Proceedings of the biannual ACM Lisp and Functional Programming
      Conference. (First one was in 1980.)

   4. Proceedings of the annual Lisp Users and Vendors Conference.

Implementation-specific questions:

   1. Lucid. See the wizards.doc file that comes with the Lucid
      release. It describes functions, macros, variables and constants that
      are not official parts of the product and are not supported.
      Constructs described in this file include: the interrupt facility, the
      source file recording facility, the resource facility, multitasking,
      writing your own streams, lisp pipes, i/o buffers, the compiler,
      floating-point functions, memory management, debugger information, the
      window tool kit, extensions to the editor, the foreign function
      interface, clos information, delivery toolkit information, and Lucid
      lisp training classes. The wizards.doc file also covers i/o
      constructs, functions for dealing with DEFSTRUCT, functions and
      constants for dealing with procedure objects, functions and constants
      for dealing with code objects, function for mapping objects,
      additional keyword argument to DISKSAVE, function used in the
      implementation of arrays, function for monitor-specific behavior for a
      process, additional keyword argument to RUN-PROGRAM, and load-time
      evaluation.

Many books on Scheme are worth reading even if you use Common Lisp,
because many of the issues are similar. Scheme is a simpler language
to learn, so it is often used in introductory computer science
classes.  See the Scheme FAQ for a list of introductions and
references for Scheme. The two key introductions are Abelson and
Sussman's "Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs" and 
Friedman and Felleisen's "The Little LISPer". 

Special Topics:

   Garbage Collection:

      Wilson, Paul R., "Uniprocessor Garbage Collection Techniques"
      Proceedings of the 1992 International Workshop on Memory Management.
      Springer Lecture Notes #637. Surveys garbage collection techniques. 
      Includes an excellent bibliography. Available by anonymous ftp from
	 cs.utexas.edu:pub/garbage/gcsurvey.ps.
      The BibTeX format of the bibliography is also available in this
      directory, along with several other papers. Contact ······@cs.utexas.edu
      for more info.

----------------------------------------------------------------
Subject: [1-3] How can I improve my Lisp programming style and 
	       coding efficiency?

There are several books about Lisp programming style, including:
   
   1. Molly M. Miller and Eric Benson
      "Lisp Style and Design"
      Digital Press, 1990. 214 pages. ISBN 1-55558-044-0.
	   How to write large Lisp programs and improve Lisp programming 
	   style. Uses the development of Lucid CL as an example. 

   2. Robin Jones, Clive Maynard, and Ian Stewart.
      "The Art of Lisp Programming"
      Springer-Verlag, 1989. 169 pages.

   3. W. Richard Stark.
      "LISP, Lore, and Logic: an algebraic view of LISP
       programming, foundations, and applications"
      Springer-Verlag, 1990. 278 pages. ISBN 0-387-97072-X
	   Self-modifying code, self-reproducing programs, etc.

   4. CMU CL User's Manual, Chapter 7, (talks about writing
      efficient code). It is available by anonymous ftp from any CMU CS 
      machine (e.g., ftp.cs.cmu.edu [128.2.206.173]) as the file
	/afs/cs.cmu.edu/project/clisp/docs/cmu-user/cmu-user.ps 
      [when getting this file by anonymous ftp, one must cd to 
      the directory in one atomic operation, as some of the superior
      directories on the path are protected from access by anonymous ftp.]

   5. See also Norvig's book, SICP (Abelson & Sussman), SAP
      (Springer and Friedman).

   6. Hallvard Tretteberg's Lisp Style Guide is available by anonymous
      ftp in ftp.think.com:/public/think/lisp/style-guide.text. There is
      a fair bit of overlap between Hallvard's style guide and the notes
      below and in part 3 of this FAQ.

   7. Rajeev Sangal
      "Programming Paradigms in Lisp"
      McGraw-Hill, 1991. ISBN 0-07-054666-5.

   8. Rodney A. Brooks.
      "Programming in Common Lisp"
      John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1985. 303 pages. ISBN 0-471-81888-7.
      Chapter 5 discusses Lisp programming style.

Here are some general suggestions/notes about improving Lisp
programming style, readability, correctness and efficiency:

   General Programming Style Rules:

      - Write short functions, where each function provides a single,
	well-defined operation. Small functions are easier to
	read, write, test, debug, and understand.

      - Use descriptive variable and function names. If it isn't clear
	from the name of a function or variable what its purpose is,
	document it with a documentation string and a comment. In fact,
	even if the purpose is evident from the name, it is still worth
	documenting your code.

      - Don't write Pascal (or C) code in Lisp. Use the appropriate
	predefined functions -- look in the index to CLtL2, or use the
	APROPOS and DESCRIBE functions. Don't put a close parenthesis
	on a line by itself -- this can really aggravate programmers
	who grew up on Lisp. Lisp-oriented text editors include tools
	for ensuring balanced parentheses and for moving across 
	pairs of balanced parentheses. You don't need to stick
	comments on close parentheses to mark which expression they close.

      - Use proper indentation -- you should be able to understand
	the structure of your definitions without noticing the parentheses. 
	In general, the way one indents a form is controlled by the
	first symbol of the form. In DEFUNs, for example, one puts the
	symbol DEFUN, the function name, and the argument list all on
	the same line. If the argument list is too long, one can break
	it at one of the lambda keywords. Following the argument list,
	one inserts a carriage return and lists the expressions in the
	body of the definition, with each form starting on its own
	line indented three spaces relative to the open parenthesis of
	the parent (in this case the DEFUN). This general style -- of
	putting all the significant elements of a form on a single
	line, followed by a carriage return and the indented body --
	holds for many Lisp constructs. There are, of course, variations,
	such as keeping the first clause on the same line as the COND
	or CASE symbol, and the rules are relaxed in different ways to
	keep line lengths to a manageable size. If you find yourself having
	trouble fitting everything in even with line breaking and
	relaxing the rules, either your function names are too long or your
	code isn't very modular. You should perceive this as a signal that
	you need to break up your big definitions into smaller chunks, each
	with a clearly defined purpose, and possibly replace long function
	names with concise but apt shorter ones.

      - Use whitespace appropriately. Use whitespace to separate
	semantically distinct code segments, but don't use too much
	whitespace. For example,
	   GOOD: 
	      (defun foo (x y)
		(let ((z (+ x y 10)))
		  (* z z)))

	   BAD: 
	      (defun foo(x y)(let((z(+ x y 10)))(* z z)))

	      (defun foo ( x  y )
		(let ( ( z (+ x y 10) ) )
		  ( * z z )
		  )
		)    
	 Although the Lisp reader and compiler don't care which you
	 use, most experienced Lisp programs find the first example much easier
	 to read than the last two.

       - Don't use line lengths greater than 80 characters. People who
	 write code using Zmacs on Symbolics Lisp Machines are notoriously
	 guilty of violating this rule, because the CPT6 font allows
	 one to squeeze a tremendous amount of code on the display,
	 especially if one spreads the code out horizontally. This
	 makes it more difficult to read when printed out or read on
	 an 80x24 xterm window. In fact, use a line length of 72 characters
	 because it leaves a strip of white space at the edge of the window.

   The following functions often abused or misunderstood by novices. 
   Think twice before using any of these functions.

      - EVAL. Novices almost always misuse EVAL. When experts use
	EVAL, they often would be better off using APPLY, FUNCALL, or
	SYMBOL-VALUE. Use of EVAL when defining a macro should set off
	a warning bell -- macro definitions are already evaluated
	during expansion. See also the answer to question 3-12.
	The general rule of thumb about EVAL is: if you think you need
	to use EVAL, you're probably wrong.

      - PROGV. PROGV binds dynamic variables and is often misused in
	conjunction with EVAL, which uses the dynamic environment. 
	In general, avoid unnecessary use of special variables.
	PROGV is mainly for writing interpreters for languages embedded
	in Lisp. If you want to bind a list of values to a list of
	lexical variables, use
	    (MULTIPLE-VALUE-BIND (..) (VALUES-LIST ..) ..)
	or
	    (MULTIPLE-VALUE-SETQ (..) (VALUES-LIST ..))
	instead. Most decent compilers can optimize this expression. 
	However, use of this idiom is not to be encouraged unless absolutely
	necessary.

      - CATCH and THROW. Often a named BLOCK and RETURN-FROM are
	more appropriate. Use UNWIND-PROTECT when necessary.

      - Destructive operations, such as NCONC, SORT, DELETE,
	RPLACA, and RPLACD, should be used carefully and sparingly.
	In general, trust the garbage collector: allocate new
	data structures when you need them.

   To improve the readability of your code,

      - Don't use any C{A,D}R functions with more than two
	letters between the C and the R. When nested, they become
	hard to read. If you have complex data structures, you
	are often better off describing them with a DEFSTRUCT,
	even if the type is LIST. The data abstraction afforded by
	DEFSTRUCT makes the code much more readable and its purpose
	clearer. If you must use C{A,D}R, try to use
	DESTRUCTURING-BIND instead, or at least SECOND, THIRD, 
	NTH, NTHCDR, etc.

      - Use COND instead of IF and PROGN. In general, don't use PROGN if
	there is a way to write the code within an implicit
	PROGN. For example, 
	   (IF (FOO X)
	       (PROGN (PRINT "hi there") 23)
	       34)
	should be written using COND instead.

      - Never use a 2-argument IF or a 3-argument IF with a second
	argument of NIL unless you want to emphasize the return value;
	use WHEN and UNLESS instead. You will want to emphasize the
	return value when the IF clause is embedded within a SETQ,
	such as (SETQ X (IF (EQ Y Z) 2 NIL)). If the second argument 
	to IF is the same as the first, use OR instead: (OR P Q) rather
	than (IF P P Q). Use UNLESS instead of (WHEN (NOT ..) ..)
	but not instead of (WHEN (NULL ..) ..).

      - Use COND instead of nested IF statements. Be sure to check for
	unreachable cases, and eliminate those cond-clauses.

      - Use backquote, rather than explicit calls to LIST, CONS, and
	APPEND, whenever writing a form which produces a Lisp form, but
	not as a general substitute for LIST, CONS and APPEND. LIST, 
	CONS and APPEND usually allocate new storage, but lists produced
	by backquote may involve destructive modification (e.g., ,.).

      - Make the names of special (global) variables begin and end
	with an asterisk (*): (DEFVAR *GLOBAL-VARIABLE*)   
	Some programmers will mark the beginning and end of an internal
	global variable with a percent (%) or a period (.).
	Make the names of constants begin and end with a plus (+):
	(DEFCONSTANT +E+ 2.7182818)
	This helps distinguish them from lexical variables. Some people
	prefer to use macros to define constants, since this avoids
	the problem of accidentally trying to bind a symbol declared
	with defconstant.

      - If your program is built upon an underlying substrate which is
	implementation-dependent, consider naming those functions and
	macros in a way that visually identifies them, either by placing
	them in their own package, or prepending a character like a %, ., 
	or ! to the function name. Note that many programmers use the
	$ as a macro character for slot access, so it should be avoided
	unless you're using it for that purpose.

      - Don't use property lists. Instead, use an explicit hash table.
	This helps avoid problems caused by the symbol being in the wrong
	package, accidental reuse of property keys from other
	programs, and allows you to customize the structure of the table. 

      - Use the most specific construct that does the job. This lets
	readers of the code see what you intended when writing the code.
	For example, don't use SETF if SETQ will do (e.g., for lexical
	variables). Use the most specific predicate to test your conditions.
	If you intend for a function to be a predicate, have it return T
	for true, not just non-NIL. 

      - When NIL is used as an empty list, use () in your code. When NIL
	is used as a boolean, use NIL. Similarly, use NULL to test for an
	empty list, NOT to test a logical value. Use ENDP to test for the
	end of a list, not NULL.

      - Don't use the &AUX lambda-list keyword. It is always clearer to
	define local variables using LET or LET*.

      - When using RETURN and RETURN-FROM to exit from a block, don't
	use (VALUES ..) when returning only one value, except if you
	are using it to suppress extra multiple values from the first
	argument. 

      - If you want a function to return no values (i.e., equivalent to
	VOID in C), use (VALUES) to return zero values. This signals
	to the reader that the function is used mainly for side-effects.

      - (VALUES (VALUES 1 2 3)) returns only the first value, 1.
	You can use (VALUES (some-multiple-value-function ..)) to suppress
	the extra multiple values from the function. Use MULTIPLE-VALUE-PROG1
	instead of PROG1 when the multiple values are significant.

      - When using MULTIPLE-VALUE-BIND and DESTRUCTURING-BIND, don't rely
	on the fact that NIL is used when values are missing. This is
	an error in some implementations of DESTRUCTURING-BIND. Instead,
	make sure that your function always returns the proper number of
	values.

      - Type the name of external symbols, functions, and variables
	from the COMMON-LISP package in uppercase. This will allow your
	code to work properly in a case-sensitive version of Common Lisp,
	since the print-names of symbols in the COMMON-LISP package
	are uppercase internally. (However, not everybody feels that
	being nice to case-sensitive Lisps is a requirement, so this
	isn't an absolute style rule, just a suggestion.)

    Lisp Idioms:

      - MAPCAN is used with a function to return a variable number of
	items to be included in an output list. When the function returns zero
	or one items, the function serves as a filter. For example,
	   (mapcan #'(lambda (x) (when (and (numberp x) (evenp x)) (list x)))
		   '(1 2 3 4 x 5 y 6 z 7))

    Documentation:

      - Comment your code. Use three semicolons in the left margin before
	the definition for major explanations. Use two semicolons that
	float with the code to explain the routine that follows. Two
	semicolons may also be used to explain the following line when the
	comment is too long for the single semicolon treatment. Use
	a single semicolon to the right of the code to explain a particular
	line with a short comment. The number of semicolons used roughly
	corresponds with the length of the comment. Put at least one blank
	line before and after top-level expressions.

      - Include documentation strings in your code. This lets users
	get help while running your program without having to resort to
	the source code or printed documentation. 

   Issues related to macros:

      - Never use a macro instead of a function for efficiency reasons.
	Declaim the function as inline -- for example, 
	  (DECLAIM (INLINE ..))
	This is *not* a magic bullet -- be forewarned that inline
	expansions can often increase the code size dramatically. INLINE
	should be used only for short functions where the tradeoff is
	likely to be worthwhile: inner loops, types that the compiler
	might do something smart with, and so on.

      - When defining a macro that provides an implicit PROGN, use the
	&BODY lambda-list keyword instead of &REST.

      - Use gensyms for bindings within a macro, unless the macro lets
	the user explicitly specify the variable. For example:
	    (defmacro foo ((iter-var list) body-form &body body)
	      (let ((result (gensym "RESULT")))
		`(let ((,result nil))
		   (dolist (,iter-var ,list ,result)
		     (setq ,result ,body-form)
		     (when ,result
			,@body)))))	   
	This avoids errors caused by collisions during macro expansion
	between variable names used in the macro definition and in the
	supplied body.

      - Use a DO- prefix in the name of a macro that does some kind of
	iteration, WITH- when the macro establishes bindings, and
	DEFINE- or DEF- when the macro creates some definitions. Don't
	use the prefix MAP- in macro names, only in function names.

      - Don't create a new iteration macro when an existing function
	or macro will do.

      - Don't define a macro where a function definition will work just
	as well -- remember, you can FUNCALL or MAPCAR a function but 
	not a macro.

      - The LOOP and SERIES macros generate efficient code. If you're
	writing a new iteration macro, consider learning to use one
	of them instead.
  
   File Modularization:

      - If your program involves macros that are used in more than one
	file, it is generally a good idea to put such macros in a separate
	file that gets loaded before the other files. The same things applies
	to primitive functions. If a macro is complicated, the code that
	defines the macro should be put into a file by itself. In general, if
	a set of definitions form a cohesive and "independent" whole, they
	should be put in a file by themselves, and maybe even in their own
	package. It isn't unusual for a large Lisp program to have files named
	"site-dependent-code", "primitives.lisp", and "macros.lisp". If a file
	contains primarily macros, put "-macros" in the name of the file.

   Stylistic preferences:

      - Use (SETF (CAR ..) ..) and (SETF (CDR ..) ..) in preference to
	RPLACA and RPLACD. Likewise (SETF (GET ..) ..) instead of PUT.

      - Use INCF, DECF, PUSH and POP instead instead of the corresponding
	SETF forms.

      - Many programmers religiously avoid using CATCH, THROW, BLOCK,
	PROG, GO and TAGBODY.  Tags and go-forms should only be necessary
	to create extremely unusual and complicated iteration constructs. In
	almost every circumstance, a ready-made iteration construct or
	recursive implementation is more appropriate.

      - Don't use LET* where LET will do. Don't use LABELS where FLET
	will do. Don't use DO* where DO will do.

      - Don't use DO where DOTIMES or DOLIST will do.

      - If you like using MAPCAR instead of DO/DOLIST, use MAPC when
	no result is needed -- it's more efficient, since it doesn't
	cons up a list. If a single cumulative value is required, use
	REDUCE. If you are seeking a particular element, use FIND,
	POSITION, or MEMBER.

      - If using REMOVE and DELETE to filter a sequence, don't use the
	:test-not keyword or the REMOVE-IF-NOT or DELETE-IF-NOT functions.
	Use COMPLEMENT to complement the predicate and the REMOVE-IF
	or DELETE-IF functions instead.

      - Use complex numbers to represent points in a plane.

      - Don't use lists where vectors are more appropriate. Accessing the
	nth element of a vector is faster than finding the nth element
	of a list, since the latter requires pointer chasing while the
	former requires simple addition. Vectors also take up less space
	than lists. Use adjustable vectors with fill-pointers to
	implement a stack, instead of a list -- using a list continually
	conses and then throws away the conses.

      - When adding an entry to an association list, use ACONS, not
	two calls to CONS. This makes it clear that you're using an alist.

      - If your association list has more than about 10 entries in it,
	consider using a hash table. Hash tables are often more efficient.
        (See also [2-2].)

      - When you don't need the full power of CLOS, consider using
	structures instead. They are often faster, take up less space, and
	easier to use.

      - Use PRINT-UNREADABLE-OBJECT when writing a print-function.

      - Use WITH-OPEN-FILE instead of OPEN and CLOSE.

      - When a HANDLER-CASE clause is executed, the stack has already
	unwound, so dynamic bindings that existed when the error
	occured may no longer exist when the handler is run. Use
	HANDLER-BIND if you need this. 

      - When using CASE and TYPECASE forms, if you intend for the form
	to return NIL when all cases fail, include an explicit OTHERWISE
	clause. If it would be an error to return NIL when all cases
	fail, use ECASE, CCASE, ETYPECASE or CTYPECASE instead.

      - Use local variables in preference to global variables whenever
	possible. Do not use global variables in lieu of parameter passing.
	Global variables can be used in the following circumstances:
	  *  When one function needs to affect the operation of
	     another, but the second function isn't called by the first.
	     (For example, *load-pathname* and *break-on-warnings*.)
	  *  When a called function needs to affect the current or future
	     operation of the caller, but it doesn't make sense to accomplish
	     this by returning multiple values.
	  *  To provide hooks into the mechanisms of the program.
	     (For example, *evalhook*, *, /, and +.)
	  *  Parameters which, when their value is changed, represent a
	     major change to the program.
	     (For example, *print-level* and *print-readably*.)
	  *  For state that persists between invocations of the program.
	     Also, for state which is used by more than one major program.
	     (For example, *package*, *readtable*, *gensym-counter*.)
	  *  To provide convenient information to the user.
	     (For example, *version* and *features*.)
	  *  To provide customizable defaults. 
	     (For example, *default-pathname-defaults*.)
	  *  When a value affects major portions of a program, and passing
	     this value around would be extremely awkward. (The example
	     here is output and input streams for a program. Even when
	     the program passes the stream around as an argument, if you
	     want to redirect all output from the program to a different
	     stream, it is much easier to just rebind the global variable.)

      - Beginning students, especially ones accustomed to programming
	in C, Pascal, or Fortran, tend to use global variables to hold or pass
	information in their programs. This style is considered ugly by
	experienced Lisp programmers. Although assignment statements can't
	always be avoided in production code, good programmers take advantage
	of Lisp's functional programming style before resorting to SETF and
	SETQ. For example, they will nest function calls instead of using a
	temporary variable and use the stack to pass multiple values. When
	first learning to program in Lisp, try to avoid SETF/SETQ and their
	cousins as much as possible. And if a temporary variable is necessary,
	bind it to its first value in a LET statement, instead of letting it
	become a global variable by default. (If you see lots of compiler
	warnings about declaring variables to be special, you're probably
	making this mistake. If you intend a variable to be global, it should
	be defined with a DEFVAR or DEFPARAMETER statement, not left to the
	compiler to fix.)

   Correctness and efficiency issues:

      - In CLtL2, IN-PACKAGE does not evaluate its argument. Use defpackage
	to define a package and declare the external (exported)
	symbols from the package. 

      - The ARRAY-TOTAL-SIZE-LIMIT may be as small as 1024, and the
	CALL-ARGUMENTS-LIMIT may be as small as 50. 

      - Novices often mistakenly quote the conditions of a CASE form.
	For example, (case x ('a 3) ..) is incorrect. It would return
	3 if x were the symbol QUOTE. Use (case x (a 3) ..) instead.

      - Avoid using APPLY to flatten lists. (apply #'append list-of-lists)
	is compiled into a function call, and can run into problems with
	the CALL-ARGUMENTS-LIMIT. Use REDUCE or MAPCAR instead:
	   (reduce #'append list-of-lists :from-end t)
	   (mapcan #'copy-list list-of-lists)
	The second will often be more efficient (see note below about choosing
	the right algorithm). Beware of calls like (apply f (mapcar ..)).

      - NTH must cdr down the list to reach the elements you are
	interested in. If you don't need the structural flexibility of
	lists, try using vectors and the ELT function instead.

      - CASE statements can be vectorized if the keys are consecutive
	numbers. Such CASE statements can still have OTHERWISE clauses.
	To take advantage of this without losing readability, use #. with 
	symbolic constants:

	    (eval-when (compile load eval)
	       (defconstant RED 1)
	       (defconstant GREEN 2)
	       (defconstant BLUE 3))

	    (case color
	      (#.RED   ...)
	      (#.GREEN ...)
	      (#.BLUE  ...)
	      ...)

      - Don't use quoted constants where you might later destructively
	modify them. For example, instead of writing '(c d) in
	   (defun foo ()
	     (let ((var '(c d)))
	       ..))
	write (list 'c 'd) instead. Using a quote here can lead to
	unexpected results later. If you later destructively modify the 
	value of var, this is self-modifying code! Some Lisp compilers
	will complain about this, since they like to make constants
	read-only. Modifying constants has undefined results in ANSI CL.
	See also the answer to question [3-13].

	Similarly, beware of shared list structure arising from the use
	of backquote. Any sublist in a backquoted expression that doesn't
	contain any commas can share with the original source structure.

      - Don't proclaim unsafe optimizations, such as
	   (proclaim '(optimize (safety 0) (speed 3) (space 1))) 
	since this yields a global effect. Instead, add the
	optimizations as local declarations to small pieces of
	well-tested, performance-critical code:
	   (defun well-tested-function ()
	      (declare (optimize (safety 0) (speed 3) (space 1)))
	     ..)
	Such optimizations can remove run-time type-checking; type-checking
	is necessary unless you've very carefully checked your code
	and added all the appropriate type declarations.

      - Some programmers feel that you shouldn't add declarations to
	code until it is fully debugged, because incorrect
	declarations can be an annoying source of errors. They recommend
	using CHECK-TYPE liberally instead while you are developing the code.
	On the other hand, if you add declarations to tell the
	compiler what you think your code is doing, the compiler can
	then tell you when your assumptions are incorrect.
	Declarations also make it easier for another programmer to read
	your code. 

      - Declaring the type of variables to be FIXNUM does not
	necessarily mean that the results of arithmetic involving the 
	fixnums will be a fixnum; it could be a BIGNUM. For example,
	   (declare (type fixnum x y))
	   (setq z (+ (* x x) (* y y)))
	could result in z being a BIGNUM. If you know the limits of your
	numbers, use a declaration like
	   (declare (type (integer 0 100) x y))
	instead, since most compilers can then do the appropriate type
	inference, leading to much faster code.

      - Don't change the compiler optimization with an OPTIMIZE
	proclamation or declaration until the code is fully debugged
	and profiled.  When first writing code you should say 
	(declare (optimize (safety 3))) regardless of the speed setting.

      - Depending on the optimization level of the compiler, type
	declarations are interpreted either as (1) a guarantee from
	you that the variable is always bound to values of that type,
	or (2) a desire that the compiler check that the variable is
	always bound to values of that type. Use CHECK-TYPE if (2) is
	your intention.

      - If you get warnings about unused variables, add IGNORE
	declarations if appropriate or fix the problem. Letting such
	warnings stand is a sloppy coding practice.

   To produce efficient code,

      - choose the right algorithm. For example, consider seven possible
	implementations of COPY-LIST:

	   (defun copy-list (list)
	     (let ((result nil))
	       (dolist (item list result)
		 (setf result (append result (list item))))))

	   (defun copy-list (list)
	     (let ((result nil))
	       (dolist (item list (nreverse result))
		 (push item result))))

	   (defun copy-list (list)
	     (mapcar #'identity list))

	   (defun copy-list (list)
	     (let ((result (make-list (length list))))
	       (do ((original list (cdr original))
		    (new result (cdr new)))
		   ((null original) result)
		 (setf (car new) (car original)))))

	   (defun copy-list (list)
	     (when list
	       (let* ((result (list (car list)))
		      (tail-ptr result))
		 (dolist (item (cdr list) result)
		   (setf (cdr tail-ptr) (list item))
		   (setf tail-ptr (cdr tail-ptr))))))
	
	    (defun copy-list (list)
	      (loop for item in list collect item))

	    (defun copy-list (list)
	      (if (consp list) 
		  (cons (car list)
			(copy-list (cdr list)))
		  list))

	The first uses APPEND to tack the elements onto the end of the list.
	Since APPEND must traverse the entire partial list at each step, this
	yields a quadratic running time for the algorithm.  The second
	implementation improves on this by iterating down the list twice; once
	to build up the list in reverse order, and the second time to reverse
	it. The efficiency of the third depends on the Lisp implementation,
	but it is usually similar to the second, as is the fourth.  The fifth
	algorithm, however, iterates down the list only once. It avoids the
	extra work by keeping a pointer (reference) to the last cons of the 
	list and RPLACDing onto the end of that. Use of the fifth algorithm 
	may yield a speedup. Note that this contradicts the earlier dictum to
	avoid destructive functions. To make more efficient code one might
	selectively introduce destructive operations in critical sections of
	code. Nevertheless, the fifth implementation may be less efficient in
	Lisps with cdr-coding, since it is more expensive to RPLACD cdr-coded
	lists. Depending on the implementation of nreverse, however,
	the fifth and second implementations may be doing the same
	amount of work. The sixth example uses the Loop macro, which usually
	expands into code similar to the third. The seventh example copies
	dotted lists, and runs in linear time, but isn't tail-recursive. 

      - use type declarations liberally in time-critical code, but
	only if you are a seasoned Lisp programmer. Appropriate type
	declarations help the compiler generate more specific and
	optimized code. It also lets the reader know what assumptions
	were made. For example, if you only use fixnum arithmetic,
	adding declarations can lead to a significant speedup. If you
	are a novice Lisp programmer, you should use type declarations
	sparingly, as there may be no checking to see if the
	declarations are correct, and optimized code can be harder to
	debug. Wrong declarations can lead to errors in otherwise
	correct code, and can limit the reuse of code in other
	contexts. Depending on the Lisp compiler, it may also 
	be necessary to declare the type of results using THE, since
	some compilers don't deduce the result type from the inputs.

      - check the code produced by the compiler by using the
	disassemble function

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Subject: [1-4] Where can I learn about implementing Lisp interpreters 
	       and compilers?

Books about Lisp implementation include:

   1. John Allen
      "Anatomy of Lisp"
      McGraw-Hill, 1978. 446 pages. ISBN 0-07-001115-X

   2. Samuel Kamin
      "Programming Languages, An Interpreter-Based Approach"
      Addison-Wesley, Reading, Mass., 1990. ISBN 0-201-06824-9
	   Includes sources to several interpreters for Lisp-like
	   languages, and a pointer to sources via anonymous ftp.

   3. Sharam Hekmatpour
      "Lisp: A Portable Implementation"
      Prentice Hall, 1985. ISBN 0-13-537490-X.
	   Describes a portable implementation of a small dynamic
	   Lisp interpreter (including C source code). 

   4. Peter Henderson
      "Functional Programming: Application and Implementation"
      Prentice-Hall (Englewood Cliffs, NJ), 1980. 355 pages.

   5. Peter M. Kogge
      "The Architecture of Symbolic Computers"
      McGraw-Hill, 1991. ISBN 0-07-035596-7.
	   Includes sections on memory management, the SECD and
	   Warren Abstract Machines, and overviews of the various
	   Lisp Machine architectures.
   
   6. Daniel P. Friedman, Mitchell Wand, and Christopher T. Haynes
      "Essentials of Programming Languages"
      MIT Press, 1992, 536 pages. ISBN 0-262-06145-7.
	   Teaches fundamental concepts of programming language
	   design by using small interpreters as examples. Covers
	   most of the features of Scheme. Includes a discussion
	   of parameter passing techniques, object oriented languages,
	   and techniques for transforming interpreters to allow
	   their implementation in terms of any low-level language.
	   Also discusses scanners, parsers, and the derivation of
	   a compiler and virtual machine from an interpreter.
	   Source files available by anonymous ftp from cs.indiana.edu
	   in the directory /pub/eopl (129.79.254.191).

   7. Peter Lee, editor, "Topics in Advanced Language Implementation",
      The MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass., 1991.
	   Articles relevant to the implementation of functional
	   programming languages.

   8. Also see the proceedings of the biannual ACM Lisp and Functional
      Programming conferences, the implementation notes for CMU Common Lisp,
      Norvig's book, and SICP (Abelson & Sussman).

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Subject: [1-5]	What does CLOS, PCL, X3J13, CAR, CDR, ... mean? 

Glossary of acronyms:
   CAR		   Originally meant "Contents of Address portion of Register",
		   which is what CAR actually did on the IBM 704.
   CDR		   Originally meant "Contents of Decrement portion of 
		   Register", which is what CDR actually did
		   on the IBM 704. Pronounced "Cudder".
   LISP		   Originally from "LISt Processing"
   GUI		   Graphical User Interface
   CLOS		   Common Lisp Object System. The object oriented
		   programming standard for Common Lisp. Based on
		   Symbolics FLAVORS and Xerox LOOPS, among others.
		   Pronounced either as "See-Loss" or "Closs". See also PCL.
   PCL		   Portable Common Loops. A portable CLOS implementation.
		   Available by anonymous ftp from parcftp.xerox.com:pcl/.
   LOOPS	   Lisp Object Oriented Programming System. A predecessor
		   to CLOS on Xerox Lisp machines.
   X3J13	   Subcommittee of the ANSI committee X3 which is
		   working on the ANSI Standardization of Common Lisp.
   ANSI		   American National Standards Institute
   CL		   Common Lisp
   SC22/WG16	   The full name is ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 22/WG 16. It stands
		   for International Organization for
		   Standardization/International Electronics(?)	 
		   Congress(?) Joint Technical Committee 1, Subcommittee 22,
		   Working Group 16.  This long-winded name is the ISO
		   working group working on an international Lisp standard,
		   (i.e., the ISO analogue to X3J13).
   CLtL1	   First edition of Guy Steele's book, 
		   "Common Lisp the Language". 
   CLtL2	   Second edition of Guy Steele's book,
		   "Common Lisp the Language". 

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Subject: [1-6] Lisp Job Postings

The LISP-JOBS mailing list exists to help programmers find Lisp
programming positions, and to help companies with Lisp programming
positions find capable Lisp programmers. (Lisp here means Lisp-like
languages, including Scheme.)

Material appropriate for the list includes Lisp job announcements and
should be sent to ·········@anzus.com.  Administrative requests (e.g.,
to be added to the list) should be sent to ·················@anzus.com.

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;;; *EOF*