- Source: Le Lisp
Le Lisp (also Le_Lisp and Le-Lisp) is a programming language, a dialect of the language Lisp.
Programming language
It was developed at the French Institute for Research in Computer Science and Automation (INRIA), to be an implementation language for a very large scale integration (VLSI) workstation being designed under the direction of Jean Vuillemin. Le Lisp also had to run on various incompatible platforms (mostly running Unix operating systems) that were used by the project. The main goals for the language were to be a powerful post-Maclisp version of Lisp that would be portable, compatible, extensible, and efficient.
Jérôme Chailloux led the Le Lisp team, working with Emmanuel St. James, Matthieu Devin, and Jean-Marie Hullot in 1980. The dialect is historically noteworthy as one of the first Lisp implementations to be available on both the Apple II and the IBM PC.
On 2020-01-08, INRIA agreed to migrate the source code to the 2-clause BSD License which allowed few native ports from ILOG and Eligis to adopt this license model.
References
External links
Official Website at the Wayback Machine (archived 2024-05-16), Eligis, for x86 processors
Le Lisp at Computer History Museum's Software Preservation Group
Le-Lisp Open Source repository on GitHub
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Le Lisp
- Lisp (programming language)
- Lisp Machine Lisp
- Common Lisp
- AutoLISP
- Emacs Lisp
- Lisp machine
- ISLISP
- MultiLisp
- List of Lisp-family programming languages