For LispWorks, instead of typing my code in repl, I type it in the editor, also compile there , and use repl for testing only. I have noticed that the editor has some very handy buffers and definitions menus. Exactly the stuff I was looking for.
Sent from my iPhone
Having been disadvantaged by living exclusively in Microsoft's world of computing, I turned first to LispWorks (instead of Emacs) for its many windowed tools. LispWorks itself is a joy to learn; there are always features I am newly discovering, or finally understanding.
Feel free to ask questions about its general use, as that will assist me in learning more of its powers! :^)
BC
-----Original Message----- From: Aleksandar Matijaca [mailto:amatijaca@gmail.com] Sent: Thursday, October 14, 2010 11:12 AM To: toronto-lisp@common-lisp.net Subject: [toronto-lisp] Found a development technique that works for me
For LispWorks, instead of typing my code in repl, I type it in the editor, also compile there , and use repl for testing only. I have noticed that the editor has some very handy buffers and definitions menus. Exactly the stuff I was looking for.
Sent from my iPhone
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