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==Links & publications==
==Links & publications==
* David Jay Steele: ''Golden Common Lisp: A Hands-On Approach'' - 1989 - Addison Wesley - ISBN 0201416530
* David Jay Steele: ''Golden Common Lisp: A Hands-On Approach'' - Addison Wesley 1989, ISBN 0201416530
* Eric Bender: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=-pFmhH5Yv1AC&pg=RA1-PA53 Users praise Gold Hill's micro based Common Lisp] - 1985 - From [[Computerworld magazine]]
* Eric Bender: [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=-pFmhH5Yv1AC&pg=RA1-PA53 Users praise Gold Hill's micro based Common Lisp] - 1985 - from [[Computerworld]] magazine


==Licence and availability==
==Licence and availability==
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==Publisher==
==Publisher==
* [[Gold Hill Computers]]
*Gold Hill Computers


[[Category:DOS Tools]]
[[Category:DOS Tools]][[Category:LISP]]
[[Category:LISP]]

Revision as of 00:36, 6 January 2017

Originally introduced in 1984 for DOS machines, Golden Common-LISP (GCLISP) is an interpreted implementation of Common Lisp, early versions were quite far from implementing the full standard and were dynamically scoped rather than lexically but with release 3 in 1988 the system had achieved a more or less full CL compatibility. The system is still being sold in a budget version for DOS called "Golden Common-Lisp SE", that is intended for educational use.

Versions

  • Golden Common-Lisp v1 (1984)
Included interpreter, editor and a separate tutorial, USD 495.
  • Golden Common-Lisp v1.1
Last 1.x branch version
  • Golden Common-Lisp v2.2
  • Golden Common-Lisp Developer 286 v3 (1988-01)
Supposedly the first DOS based full Common Lisp implementation. USD 1,995 in 1988.
  • Golden Common-Lisp SE
Current

Links & publications

Licence and availability

Closed source commercial software

Publisher

  • Gold Hill Computers