Cookbook, n. a book containing recipes and other information about the preparation and cooking of food.
now with extra Lisp
Content
- License
- Editor support
- Strings
- Dates and Times
- Hash Tables
- Pattern Matching / Regular Expressions
- Functions
- Loop
- Input/Output
- Files and Directories
- Packages
- Macros and Backquote
- CLOS (the Common Lisp Object System)
- Sockets
- Interfacing with your OS
- Foreign Function Interfaces
- Threads
- Defining Systems
- Using the Win32 API
- Testing
- Miscellaneous
- License
Further remarks
This is a collaborative project that aims to provide for Common Lisp something similar to the Perl Cookbook published by O’Reilly. More details about what it is and what it isn’t can be found in this thread from comp.lang.lisp.
If you want to contribute to the CL Cookbook, please send a pull request in or file a ticket!
Yes, we’re talking to you! We need contributors - write a chapter that’s missing and add it, find an open question and provide an answer, find bugs and report them, (If you have no idea what might be missing but would like to help, take a look at the table of contents of the Perl Cookbook.) Don’t worry about the formatting, just send plain text if you like - we’ll take care about that later.
Thanks in advance for your help!
The pages here on Github are kept up to date. You can also download a up to date zip file for offline browsing. More info can be found at the Github project page.
Contributors
- Marco Antoniotti
- Zach Beane
- Pierpaolo Bernardi
- Christopher Brown
- Frederic Brunel
- Jeff Caldwell
- Bill Clementson
- Martin Cracauer
- Gerald Doussot
- Paul Foley
- Jörg-Cyril Höhle
- Nick Levine
- Austin King
- Lieven Marchand
- Drew McDermott
- Kalman Reti
- Alberto Riva
- Rudi Schlatte
- Emre Sevinç
- Paul Tarvydas
- Kenny Tilton
- Reini Urban
- Matthieu Villeneuve
- Edi Weitz
- Fernando Borretti
Finally, the credit for finally giving birth to the project probably goes to “dj_special_ed” who posted this message to comp.lang.lisp.
Other CL Resources
- lisp-lang.org
- The Awesome-cl list
- The Common Lisp HyperSpec by Kent M. Pitman
- The Common Lisp UltraSpec
- Practical Common Lisp by Peter Seibel
- Common Lisp Recipes by Edmund Weitz, published in 2016,
- Cliki, Common Lisp’s wiki
- Articulate Common Lisp, an initiation manual for the uninitiated
- Common Lisp on Wikibooks
- The old comp.lang.lisp FAQ by Mark Kantrowitz
- Common Lisp: A Gentle Introduction to Symbolic Computation by David S. Touretzky
- Successful Lisp: How to Understand and Use Common Lisp by David B. Lamkins
- On Lisp by Paul Graham
- Common Lisp the Language, 2nd Edition by Guy L. Steele
- Common Lisp Hints by Geoffrey J. Gordon
- A Guide to CLOS by Jeff Dalton
- Common Lisp Pitfalls by Jeff Dalton
- Tutorial for the Common Lisp Loop Macro by Peter D. Karp
- A Tutorial on Good Lisp Style by Peter Norvig and Kent Pitman
- Lisp and Elements of Style by Nick Levine
- Pascal Costanza’s Highly Opinionated Guide to Lisp
- Loving Lisp - the Savy Programmer’s Secret Weapon by Mark Watson
- FranzInc, a company selling Common Lisp and Graph Database solutions.