| lisp |
List Processor: A high level, list processing language commonly used in artificial intelligence and computer research. LISP is different from most other programming languages in several ways; a major difference is that recursion is used as a control structure rather than iteration (looping) which is common in most programming languages.
Ãâó: www.sivideo.com/9pcterms.htm
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| lisp |
A programming language that uses the list as its primary data object. The most widely used language for artificial intelligence.
Ãâó: www.informatics.susx.ac.uk/books/computers-and-tho...
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| lisp |
Emacs is not a self-contained binary. Many of emacs' commands are written in a language called Lisp. To call one of these functions by name, type Mx function name. The files containing these functions are in the directory /usr/src/editors/emacs/lisp. You can write your own lisp functions, but nearly all users will be able to do what they want without having to do this.
Ãâó: www-h.eng.cam.ac.uk/help/tpl/emacs/node3.html
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| lisp |
A computer language often used for text processing. Used as the internal language in emacs.
Ãâó: www-xray.ast.cam.ac.uk/~jss/lecture/grad_training/...
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| lisp |
A programming language (LIST Processing) designed specifically to manipulate symbols rather than numeric data. A LISP data element is a list of symbols that may represent any object, including its own list processing functions. [DEC].
Ãâó: www.pera.net/Tools/Glossary/Enterprise_Integration...
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