Corman Common Lisp
Developer(s) | Corman Technologies |
---|---|
Initial release | 1995 |
Stable release | 3.0.1 / September 14, 2006 |
Operating system | Windows Vista, Windows XP, Windows 2000, Windows Server 2003 |
Available in | Common Lisp |
Type | Compiler and runtime |
License | MIT license |
Website |
github |
Corman Common Lisp is a commercial implementation of the Common Lisp programming language featuring support for the Windows operating system.
License
Corman Common Lisp is commercial software.[1] In 2013 Roger Corman, the author, indicated he considers converting it to open source[2] and in January 2015 he published the source code to the Corman Lisp Github repository under the MIT license.[3]
History
Corman Common Lisp was designed and implemented by Corman Technologies, since 1995. Previously they developed PowerLisp for the Mac, but Corman CL was a complete rewrite for Windows. (PowerLisp is no longer developed or supported). They developed and maintained Corman CL, with new major releases approximately every 18 months (and minor updates more often), until 2006.[4] The CLOS implementation was originally from Art of the Metaobject Protocol Closette, and then extensively rewritten to add missing Common Lisp features and to improve performance.
External links
References
- ↑ Corman Lisp licensing and pricing information
- ↑ Corman Lisp may go open source (a blog from 2013/07/08)
- ↑ "Corman Lisp sources are now available".
- ↑ Corman Lisp 3.0 Release Notes, Sept. 14, 2006 (accessed 1 April 2014)
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