Synonym: LISP, list-processing language. Similar words: wisp, wispy, crisp, whisper, crispy, dispel, dispose, disperse. Meaning: [lɪsp] n. 1. a speech defect that involves pronouncing `s' like voiceless `th' and `z' like voiced `th' 2. a flexible procedure-oriented programing language that manipulates symbols in the form of lists. v. speak with a lisp.
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(31) Lisp is primarily a compiled language, so you can easily explore it by simply typing commands.
(32) Both C and Lisp will be available as system programming languages.
(33) Input/Output Buffer: if the lisp variable gdb-use-inferior-io-buffer is non-nil, the executable program being debugged takes its input and displays its output here.
(34) This paper presents the architecture of a list processor LP in a Lisp machine LISP-M1.
(35) The work from lambda calculus was used to develop functional programming languages, such as Lisp and Scheme.
(36) Any sufficiently complicated C or Fortran program contains an ad hoc, informally-specified, bug-ridden, slow implementation of half of Common Lisp.
(37) At present nearly all systems of polynomial manipulation are written by LISP or FORTRAN, and run on a serial computer.
(38) In 1958, John McCarthy invented a language called Lisp, which implemented both numerical and symbolic computation but in a recursive form that is foreign to most languages in use today.
(39) Binary trees are represented in the input file as LISP S - expressions having the following form.
(40) The bottom-right window, REPL, is the command-line Lisp interpreter[sentencedict.com], where you can run Lisp commands.
(41) This topic has fully utilized the calculation and drawing of the LISP program language, and the dialog function of the DCL program language.
(42) The processing of these lists using recursion and Lisp functions like car and cdr is the power of list processing using Lisp.
(43) And, in a compiled Lisp program, that new language is just as efficient as normal Lisp because all the macro code—the code that generates the new expression—runs at compile time.
(44) A LISP program can read LISP statements from a text file and execute them as if they were part of the original program.
(45) Guy Steele, who had access to an 1130 at Boston's Latin (high) school, wrote a LISP interpreter that we can still use today.
(46) The Lisp compiler or interpreter can translate certain forms of recursion to iteration, allowing a simpler, cleaner way to work with recursive data structures, such as trees.
(47) Languages with advanced metaprogramming capabilities, such as Ruby and Lisp, allow some testing tricks that other languages don't,(http://sentencedict.com/lisp.html) such as easier access to mock objects.
(48) Up to now, you've been using Lisp as a largely typeless language.
(49) Some of the very best work has an uncanny quality: Euler's Formula, Bruegel's Hunters in the Snow, the SR-71, Lisp.
(50) Let's begin by getting the LISP interpreter from the site that maintains the 1130, ibm1130.org (see Listing 2).
(51) This problem deals with determining whether binary trees represented as LISP S - expressions possess a certain property.
(52) Unfortunately, the LISP - based software kept crashing, and they had to abandon the attempt till next year.
(53) The map function, originating in functional languages like Lisp but now common in many other languages, is an application of a function over a list of elements.
(54) Good design is often strange. Some of the very best work has an uncanny quality: Euler's Formula, Bruegel's Hunters in the Snow, the SR-71, Lisp.
(55) The name Lisp comes from "list processing," and it is often said that everything in Lisp is a list.
(56) Sims's equation -- genes were small self - contained logical units of a computer language ( LISP ).
(57) One has to be careful about doing this however, as it can create a circular reference that will interfere with both the Lisp and .NET garbage collectors.
(58) LISP provides two primitives for sorting: sort and stable - sort.
(59) Under the covers, the code configures the simulator for the disk (where it loads the LISP interpreter), the card reader (where it reads the job), and the printer (where it emits the output).
(60) Method of the Expert System of Fuzzy Reasoning with Weights Achieved by LISP Language.
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