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Practical Common Lisp

Frank Buss writes "Common Lisp is an ANSI standard, which defines a general purpose language and library, and is implemented by free and commercial compilers and IDEs; see *hyper-cliki* for more general information about Common Lisp. The book Practical Common Lisp explains the language with many practical examples and is available in full text online, too." Read on for the rest of Buss' review. Practical Common Lisp author Peter Seibel, Gary Cornell (Editor) pages 500 publisher Apress rating 8 reviewer Frank Buss ISBN 1590592395 summary A book for learning and using Common Lisp

Unlike other good books about Lisp, which are focused on a specific domain, like AI (such as Paradigms of Artificial Intelligence Programming ) or basic computer science (for example Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs for the Lisp-like language Scheme), this book focuses on solving real-world problems in Common Lisp, like web programming, testing etc., after introducing the language by examples in the first chapters. I started with Lisp half an year ago, and it has helped me a lot in learning it. But even if you already know Lisp, this book may be useful for you, because it has a fresh view on the language and the examples in the later chapters are usable in your day-to-day work as a programmer.

The first chapter tells you something about the author (he was a good Java programmer before starting with Lisp) and the history of Lisp and Lisp dialects like Scheme. The next chapters are a tour through all Lisp features, written in easy-to-understand steps, beginning with the installation of a Lisp system and an introduction to the interactive REPL. You don't need any experience in other languages to understand it.

The general concept throughout is to explain a feature first, then show an example of how to use it, with detailed discussion of what the example does and possible pitfalls. A nice example is the APPEND function, which does not copy the last argument:

The reason most list functions are written functionally is it allows them to return results that share cons cells with their arguments. To take a concrete example, the function APPEND takes any number of list arguments and returns a new list containing the elements of all its arguments. For instance:(append (list 1 2) (list 3 4)) ==> (1 2 3 4)

From a functional point of view, APPEND's job is to return the list (1 2 3 4) without modifying any of the cons cells in the lists (1 2) and (3 4). One obvious way to achieve that goal is to create a completely new list consisting of four new cons cells. However, that's more work than is necessary. Instead, APPEND actually makes only two new cons cells to hold the values 1 and 2, linking them together and pointing the CDR of the second cons cell at the head of the last argument, the list (3 4). It then returns the cons cell containing the 1. None of the original cons cells has been modified, and the result is indeed the list (1 2 3 4). The only wrinkle is that the list returned by APPEND shares some cons cells with the list (3 4). The resulting structure looks like this:

In general, APPEND must copy all but its last argument, but it can always return a result that shares structure with the last argument.

In chapter 9, the first larger practical example is developed, a unit testing framework (like JUnit), which is easy to use and to enhance.

Certain Lisp implementation behaviors can be confusing, such as those for for building pathnames. The pathname concept in Lisp is very abstract, leading to different choices in different implementations. This is no problem if you use only one implementation, but chapter 15 develops a portable pathname library, which works on many implementations. By doing this, it shows you how to write portable Lisp code, using different code for different implementations with reader macros.

After an introduction to the Common Lisp Object System (CLOS) and a few practical FORMAT recipes (the printf for Lisp, but more powerful), chapter 19, "Beyond Exception Handling: Conditions and Restarts", is really useful. The exception handling in Lisp (called "condition system") is more general than other exeption systems: In Lisp you can define restarts where you generate an exception and the exeption handler can call these restarts to continue the program. After reading this chapter, you'll never again want to use the restricted version of Java or C++ exception handling.

Chapters 23 to 31 show real world examples: a spam filter, parsing binary files, an ID3 parser, Web programming with AllegroServe, an MP3 database, a Shoutcast server, an MP3 browser and an HTML generation library with interpreter and compiler. If you ever thought that Lisp is an old language, only used for AI research, these chapters prove you wrong: Especially the binary files parser shows you, how you can extend the language with macros for implementing binary file readers, which looks nearly as clear and compact as the plain text binary file description itself. I'm using some of the ideas for a Macromedia Flash SWF file reader/writer I'm currently writing. Take a look at my Web page for my currently published Lisp projects.

The Web programming chapters demonstrates how to use a dynamic approach for generating web pages. You just start a Web server in your Lisp environment; then you can publish static Web pages or define functions, which are called when the page is requested by a browser. The author demonstrates how to define dynamic pages with formulars in Lisp and Lisp HTML generators.

After reading Practical Common Lisp, you will know most of Common Lisp and how to write real-world programs with it. Some special features, like set-dispatch-macro-character, or using one of the non-standard GUI libraries, are not explained, but it is easy to learn the rest of Common Lisp and to use other Lisp libraries, with the knowledge gained from this book.

You can purchase Practical Common Lisp from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page

12 of 617 comments (clear)

  1. Re:This is not a troll, but a query... by tenordave · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1) macros will blow your mind. Read Paul Grahams' 'On Lisp'
    2) takes bottom-up programming to the extreme. Really does help, but takes a while to get used to.
    3) Much better to develop in...interact with the interpreter, compile individual functions and run them, change variables in a running image...

    --
    http://students.washington.edu/djwatson
  2. Re:This is not a troll, but a query... by Lisper · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Lisp is worth learning for the profound enlightenment experience you will have when you finally get it; that experience will make you a better programmer for the rest of your days, even if you never actually use Lisp itself a lot."

    - Eric Raymond, "How to Become a Hacker"

  3. Re:This is not a troll, but a query... by Tayssir+John+Gabbour · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Of course, these things are true of most any functional language. IMHO, LISP is a poor choice as a starter language if you're looking for the above wins. I would start with Haskell or Scheme and move on to LISP once you had your bearings.
    This is what I did, and it was a mistake for me. Many parts of Lisp are far "newer" than other languages because it is far easier to modernize.

    For example, Qi is built on Common Lisp and claims to have "the most powerful type system of any existing functional language." I think it's a fancy academic language, but the win is that you can combine it with the hardened industrial features of Common Lisp.

  4. Re:This is not a troll, but a query... by smug_lisp_weenie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is really only one thing you need to know about lisp- Lisp essentially has NO SYNTAX. What this means is that your program is an abstract syntax tree that goes directly into the compiler.

    Compilers in other languages first need to convert the program into an AST before compiling the code. (this is a bit of an oversimplification, but essentially true.) If you want three reasons, I can explain the repercussions of programming directly in an AST:

    Elegance: In Lisp, you don't have to worry about idiosyncracies in the head of the language designers like you do in other languages: You don't have to worry about whether AND has precedence over EQUALS (Delphi programmers know this trap) you don't need to worry when a line needs to end in a semicolon, etc. etc.

    Macros: By being an AST, Lisp lets you trick the compiler into thinking it sees other code than is actually there. This is COMPLETELY DIFFERENT than so-called "macros" in other languages- In Lisp you can turn your programming language into basically ANY programming language you want, within the language itself. Read Peter's excellent book or check out this site for more info.

    Productivity: You can program in the purely-functional style that has been shown to increase programmer productivity by having a property called "referential transparency" and having the easily serializable syntax-expression format. Basically, with Lisp you can analyze/manipulate/automate the bejeezus out of your code very easily, under the mantra "code is data, data is code".

    That's what I like about Lisp, anyway...

  5. The advantages of functional languages by doc+modulo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    - C++ is more readable than assembler
    - C# and Java are more readable than C++ ...
    - At the end of this list are functional programming languages.

    If you can read source more easily, then maintainability will be better. Most projects maintain code, they write new code less often.

    This article will tell you why you should be interested in functional programming languages (this link is about Lisp). If you're smart and open minded, you will be convinced.

    The best functional languages are Haskell and Erlang (click "next" at the bottom of the page). But like the review and link indicate, there's actual value to learning Lisp.

    However, the book review is much too in-depth and has jargon.

    A simpler example: with Java you prevent bugs by static typing variables, example:

    int numberOfTries = 3;

    If you later try to fill "numberOfTries" with a string, the compiler will warn you of a bug and you'll have prevented it. The Java compiler makes it a rule that you have to give a type to your variable so your code quality will be higher (fewer bugs).

    With Haskell, you don't have to type int. Haskell will figure out the type for you, you get the benefit of preventing bugs with the convenience of not having to type variables. There are other good features like that in functional programming languages.

    You could say that every language puts restrictions on what the programmer can do. I mean writing the source code is bottlenecked by the rules of the language (every variable should have a type. You can't do this/that etc.) so that the resulting code AUTOMATICALLY has fewer bugs. Well the amount of source "laws" in functional languages is much lower than in C++ and Java. This means that there is less to remember for a programmer and there is less chance for rules to conflict/interact with each other (in Java you can't use certain variable types in static classes = another meta rule to remember).

    Besides having less rules to remember and take into consideration. The functional languages have also chosen the best "laws" to follow. I mean that if you follow the source laws of Java, it's still relatively easy to produce buggy programs, with functional languages it's harder to produce implementation bugs (thinking bugs are always possible but that's your problem).

    The only problems with functional programming languages is that the rules which govern source code are very good, but also very different from the rules in traditional programming languages. It might seem like thinking upside down/backwards for people already familiar with procedural languages. Another problem is that because of humans sticking to what they know, the libraries of the functional languages aren't as extensive as those of Java for example. This means that you'll have to program more parts of your program yourself instead of just using a ready made library which fits the task. This problem is limited by the fact that you can program 10 times faster than in Java and, as I said, maintenance takes up most of the time anyway.

    The reason I chose Erlang is because with functional purely functional programming languages like Erlang, you can automatically multitask your program over several CPU's (or this will take minimal effort). Nice feature to have in the future because every CPU manufacturer is going multi-core chip now. The future is in multiprocessor machines, not higher clockspeeds (unless diamond wafers become viable) (Lisp is not purely functional by the way).

    Also, you can easily make a server that never goes down with Erlang because your server is automatically clustered. Just plonk down a couple networked PC's and if one dies, the server cluster will just keep on going (a bit slower) until you replaced the power supply of the broken PC.

    There are tons of other advantages but, as I said,

    --
    - -- Truth addict for life.
  6. An ideal world would run on LISP... by Florian · · Score: 4, Insightful
    It's amazing and somwhat sad that programming languages and runtime environments from Smalltalk to Java to Python to C#/.NET keep reinventing the wheel while a language from the 1950s has it all and does it even better - the most elegant syntax thinkable, powerful paradigms for code reuse, dynamic typing, modern memory management with no buffer overflows, and, with Common Lisp, one robust, industrial-strength language with a rich standard library that can both interpreted and compile code, obsoleting the difference between "programming" and "scripting" languages.

    The initial vision of the GNU system - remember "GNU's not Unix" - was to combine a kernel written in C for performance reasons with a userland written largely in LISP. Emacs is the only remnant of that idea, isn't even LISP in its program core, and uses its own LISP dialect instead of CLISP or Scheme. [The climacs project, a CLISP reimplementation of Emacs, tries to fix that.]

    Two years ago, I saw a practical demonstration of a Symbolics LISP Machine from 1987. It was like seeing the light of the holy hacker grail - the first system whose userland was superior to commandline Unix in every aspect [Plan9 has superior kernel design to Unix/BSD/Linux, but its mouse-centric userland sucks IMHO]. Everything was in one language, syntax and namespace. You could hack and debug the kernel (written in LISP, too) while it was running [!], the commandline userland hooked into every aspect of the system, and could be endlessly and seamlessly extended it just through custom LISP functions and eval-ing them.

    Let's dream and hope that perhaps in one or two decades, when insight into the limitations of the Unix paradigm has become common sense, we will have a free Lisp OS as the next iteration of Free Software computing...

    --
    gopher://cramer.plaintext.cc http://cramer.plaintext.cc:70
  7. Re:My first exposure to list ( and a mirror of boo by sketerpot · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Some of the key differences between Haskell and Lisp are:
    • Haskell has a strong typing system, similar to that of ML. Lisp's type system is optional, and while many Lisp implementations can do type inference and checking, it isn't required, nor is it as big a part of the language.
    • Haskell is purely functional, and it fakes side-effects with the Monad design pattern. Lisp has side-effects, with all the advantages and disadvantages that entails.
    • Haskell uses lazy evaluation. Lisp uses strict evaluation unless you explicitly ask for lazy evaluation.
    • Lisp, thanks to all those parentheses, has very powerful macros. I know every Lisp fan says this, but they're really cool. Haskell relies more on higher-order functions and infix syntax for that sort of thing, which isn't as powerful but which you may find to be a decent tradeoff.
    • Haskell has significant whitespace, like Python. Lisp doesn't.
    • I find that editing Lisp code is easier than editing Haskell code, due to the excellent Lisp editing modes available for various text editors. OTOH, maybe that's partly because haskell-mode for emacs is pretty rough.
    • Lisp can generally be made faster than Haskell, which is very nice in bottlenecks. For the rest of the program, though, this isn't so major.
  8. Things might have been different by amightywind · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It is such a shame that C-based languages took over the computer world in the 1980's. If we had followed the Lisp path instead things might be so much better. C++ with all of the template, RTTI, and STL grunge is such a half-assed imitation of powerful Lisp constructs that have been perfected for 15 years. I won't even go into Java, Python, C#, PHP. What a waste. I suggest you non-Lisp programmers grab a copy of SICP and start over.

    --
    an ill wind that blows no good
  9. Re:This is not a troll, but a query... by e40 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you think that macros in any language are better than the ones in Lisp you are very uninformed... and you clearly never used Lisp. Lisp macros manipulate and transform Lisp expressions. Once you have used them you will be completely amazed at how powerful this is.

    As for starting with younger languages... cripes. Common Lisp became an ANSI standard in 1994. It continues to evolve and has two commercial companies behind it, and many open source projects.

  10. Re:LISP is amazing. by anactofgod · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I love it when people comment on Lisp without learning even most rudimentary aspects of the language. Not to single you out, but it is obvious to when one reads a comment posted by someone who is regurgitating commentary provided elsewhere by other who know nothing about the subject.

    I'm not certain what you've learned, but it certainly isn't "a lot". Certainly not about programming language design in general, and Lisp in particular. If you had even taken the time to read about just the history and design of Lisp, which is accessible to even the layman, you'd be able to post a more insightful comment than you just did. Why don't you try that, at minimum, since you are obviously uninterested and/or incapable of learning the technical apsects of the language.

    As for Lisp being an experimental language, nothing could be farther than the truth. Lisp is a language that was several decades ahead of its time in design, functionality and capability. Everything else is just now catching up. Evidence all the effort to fold in Lispy features into Python, Perl, Ruby, etc., etc. The thing is, these languages' designers are trying to bolt the features into their language after the fact. While Lisp Just Works.

    So, since you raised the topic, what's the answer? What would you have us "move on" to?

    --

    ---anactofgod---

    "Equal opportunity swindling - *that* is the true test of a sustainable democracy."
  11. Re:LISP is amazing. by thisgooroo · · Score: 3, Insightful
    What does 'contents of decrement address decrement register' mean? Nothing, thats what it means. It doesn't even refer to the way that the old LISP machine hardware worked. Its a false mnemonic.

    the mnemonics describe the implementation of cons cells (the basic elements from which lists are constructed, but which also can be used for other purposes). they actually are the IBM 704 assembler instructions to access the componenets of cons cells. Most (all?) lisp implementations provide other mnemonics tailored for the particular datastructures, but Lisp has a tradition of backwards compatibility, so the car and cdr mnmonics were kept in

    Besides which, just look at modern functional languages; its obvious that the excessive parenthisation in LISP is totally uneccesary.

    the original spec of lisp (the lisp1.5 manual) used both the current syntax and a more algol like syntax, but the first implementation was done in the parenthesized syntax. as one of the texts on the history of lisp explains, the suitability of the s-expression syntax for mcro processing was discovered quite early and convinced practically all lisp users not to bother with a more traditional surface syntax, even though there were a few attempts (one of the first i remember was something called Lisp2 done at Stanford in the early to mid 1960s. it looke very much like algol.

    They just couldn't write a parser for shit so they took the old adage "If in doubt, bracket" far too seriously and made it compulsory.

    bull.

  12. Re:Tcl/Tk RULES!!! by OOGG_THE_CAVEMAN · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Tcl however lack the "robust abstraction" nature of Lisp. Instead, has "everything a string" nature.

    Personally, OOGG feel any language where "value of variable" needs $ notation is severely brain-damaged. Absolute opposite of abstraction.