Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!zephyr.ens.tek.com!tekchips!tekgvs!toma From: toma@tekgvs.LABS.TEK.COM (Tom Almy) Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp Subject: Re: Is there a cheap, decent PCLisp Out There? Keywords: lisp, pc, ms, dos Message-ID: <8294@tekgvs.LABS.TEK.COM> Date: 19 Oct 90 21:19:07 GMT References: <9281@milton.u.washington.edu> <1990Oct17.224606.26480@cbnewsc.att.com> <463@caslon.cs.arizona.edu> Reply-To: toma@tekgvs.LABS.TEK.COM (Tom Almy) Organization: Tektronix, Inc., Beaverton, OR. Lines: 32 In article <463@caslon.cs.arizona.edu> shack@cs.arizona.edu (David Michael Shackelford) writes: >In article <9281@milton.u.washington.edu>, efowler@milton.u.washington.edu (Eric Fowler) writes: >> The subject line says it all-I need a (preferably)CommonLisp that will run >> on a PC. This is mostly for self-teaching of LISP at home, and need not be >> exotic. >How about XLISP? I think it's available on SIMTEL (maybe in its own directory) >It's not necessarily 100% CommonLisp, but you can't beat the price anywhere! > >It should do the job, our programming languages class uses >an XLISP dialect for the LISP section of the course. I have an extensively modified XLISP 2.1 which has been molded more into CL and fixes numerous bugs in the standard XLISP distribution. The extension over the standard XLISP are obtained via compilation options. Send a self-addressed, stamped mailer with a formatted high density floppy to: Tom Almy 17830 SW Shasta Trail Tualatin, OR 97062 Atatch a note saying: 1. You want XLISP sources. 2. Any binaries you need (generic w/wo 80x87 and 80386 protected mode w. 80387 available). 3. Documentation as PostScript file, ASCII text file, or WordPerfect 5.1 file. Tom Almy toma@tekgvs.labs.tek.com Standard Disclaimers Apply