Just a reminder: Jonathan Smith will be presenting his work on '$-Calculisp' tonight (12 June) at 6:00 PM in the usual place (MIT 32-D463). Note the time change from the last few meetings.
Jonathan's abstract follows. See you there!
-- Alex
$-Calculus (pronounced cost calculus), is a descriptive fourth generation language designed for modeling parallel algorithms, artificial intelligence applications, and bounded super-Turing computation. $-Calculisp is a domain specific language modeled on $-Calculus and implemented in Common Lisp. $-Calculisp is implemented using a variety of techniques based on Common Lisp's unique macro and object system facilities. Rather than being an interpreter, it is a macro compiler, expanding $-Calculisp code into efficiently compiled Common Lisp code. It is intended to be a robust extension to the Common Lisp language, as such, it allows for integration of regular common lisp functions alongside $-Calculisp code.
Hi, everyone
I promised to post a link to the github location account where my code is stashed, but I completely forgot.
Here it is: https://github.com/JonathanSmith/cost-calculisp-v2
Any plans for a Boston lisp meeting this month?
On Wed, Jun 12, 2013 at 8:48 AM, Alex Plotnick shrike@netaxs.com wrote:
Just a reminder: Jonathan Smith will be presenting his work on '$-Calculisp' tonight (12 June) at 6:00 PM in the usual place (MIT 32-D463). Note the time change from the last few meetings.
Jonathan's abstract follows. See you there!
-- Alex
$-Calculus (pronounced cost calculus), is a descriptive fourth generation language designed for modeling parallel algorithms, artificial intelligence applications, and bounded super-Turing computation. $-Calculisp is a domain specific language modeled on $-Calculus and implemented in Common Lisp. $-Calculisp is implemented using a variety of techniques based on Common Lisp's unique macro and object system facilities. Rather than being an interpreter, it is a macro compiler, expanding $-Calculisp code into efficiently compiled Common Lisp code. It is intended to be a robust extension to the Common Lisp language, as such, it allows for integration of regular common lisp functions alongside $-Calculisp code.