Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!clyde.concordia.ca!uunet!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!evax!lindahl From: lindahl@evax.arl.utexas.edu (Charlie Lindahl) Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp Subject: Re: REAL LISP applications Message-ID: <1990May25.221509.21274@evax.arl.utexas.edu> Date: 25 May 90 22:15:09 GMT References: <1990May24.195449.15510@king.mcs.drexel.edu> Organization: UT-Arlington-CSE Lines: 24 In-Reply-To: jsmith@king.mcs.drexel.edu's message of 24 May 90 19:54:49 GMT I can think of several applications that are LISP based (usually LISP derivatives, as opposed to Common LISP): 1) FLEXIS, a SUN-based CASE tool, originated via the ENVOS environment on XEROX LISPMs. 2) AUTOCAD, using AUTOLISP (a derivative of XLISP). 3) CimStation, by SILMA, which is a $120K package on Silicon Graphics machines (at least), which does robotic simulation/layout/programming. It uses SIL, a SILMA-developed subset of LISP. All for now. These are REAL applications that use LISP... Charlie S. Lindahl Automation and Robotics Research Institute University of Texas at Arlington ARPA: lindahl@evax.utarl.edu Standard disclaimer: Ain't no opinion but my own. -- Charlie S. Lindahl Automation and Robotics Research Institute University of Texas at Arlington ARPA: lindahl@evax.utarl.edu