Implementing curly-infix, with neoteric-expressions inside, turns out to be
more complicated in Common Lisp.
So I'd like to distinguish 2 variants of curly-infix:
1. "Full" curly-infix, with neoteric-expressions inside (see SRFI-105).
2. "Basic" curly-infix, which supports lists of basic curly-infix inside, and
no improper lists inside {...}.
"Basic" curly-infix is REALLY easy to implement in Common Lisp, and may be
easier to sneak in other places too. I want to get camel noses inside tens
however we can.
Then I can get a nice, simple "basic curly-infix" implementation that would be
rock-solid and work in all Common Lisps.
--- David A. Wheeler
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Precog is a next-generation analytics platform capable of advanced
analytics on semi-structured data. The platform includes APIs for building
apps and a phenomenal toolset for data science. Developers can use
our toolset for easy data analysis & visualization. Get a free account!
http://www2.precog.com/precogplatform/slashdotnewsletter
_______________________________________________
Readable-discuss mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/readable-discuss