(no subject)

Date: 2009-12-20 04:49 pm (UTC)
vatine: Generated with some CL code and a hand-designed blackletter font (Default)
From: [personal profile] vatine
Lua is (almost) Greenspun by design. Although Greenspunning C takes a bit of effort.

(no subject)

Date: 2009-12-21 10:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] allonymist.livejournal.com
Greenspun's tenth rule is a trap: to admit you follow it, you must evince dangerous lispish tendencies. But to deny you follow it, you must point to all your code and say, "Inquisitors! I defy you to find the tiniest spot of lisp in my unblemished codebase!"


Really, though, "Lisp" in this context means "Lisp at its best." Take a few months off your job, stay away from romance and fun, and just read the Common Lisp manuals and The Art of the Metaobject Protocol, and you too will understand Lisp At Its Best. And you will realize why List At Its Best probably can't be yours.

And if you start hassling other languages for not being Lisp At Its Best... why, is that really Lisp's fault? really?

(no subject)

Date: 2009-12-22 07:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kragen.livejournal.com
Lua very intentionally omits 95% of the feature set of Common Lisp, so that you can use it in environments where you only have room for the half of Common Lisp you're using. There are off-the-shelf libraries for a lot of those features, though, so you don't have to use an informally-specified, bug-ridden version.

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