Golden Common-LISP: Difference between revisions
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==Publications== | ==Publications== | ||
* David Jay Steele: ''Golden Common Lisp: A Hands-On Approach'' - Addison Wesley 1989, ISBN 0-201-41653-0 | * David Jay Steele: ''Golden Common Lisp: A Hands-On Approach'' - Addison Wesley 1989, ISBN 0-201-41653-0 | ||
* Eric Bender: [https://books.google. | * Eric Bender: [https://books.google.com/books?id=-pFmhH5Yv1AC&pg=RA1-PA53 Users praise Gold Hill's micro based Common Lisp] - ComputerWorld 1985 | ||
==Licence== | ==Licence== |
Revision as of 13:22, 19 January 2020
Golden Common-LISP (GCLISP) is an interpreted implementation of Common Lisp.
History
Originally introduced in 1984 for DOS machines, early versions were quite far from implementing the full standard and were dynamically scoped rather than lexically.
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.
- Golden Common-Lisp v1.1
- Last 1.x branch version
- Golden Common-Lisp v2.2
- Golden Common-Lisp Developer 286 v3.0 (1988-01)
- Golden Common-Lisp SE
Publications
- David Jay Steele: Golden Common Lisp: A Hands-On Approach - Addison Wesley 1989, ISBN 0-201-41653-0
- Eric Bender: Users praise Gold Hill's micro based Common Lisp - ComputerWorld 1985
Licence
- Closed source commercial software
- Author: Gold Hill Computers