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Dorai Sitaram  
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 More options Jul 24 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: d...@goldshoe.gte.com (Dorai Sitaram)
Date: 2000/07/24
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming

>> I'm intrigued by the idea of functional programming, but i haven't
>> found much material on it on the Web (which means i'm probably looking
>> in the wrong place). There are a number of purely functional
>> programming languages, then there's Lisp-ish languages and everything
>> else.

>> My superficial observation is that Lisp users seem to be more tolerant
>> of side-effects in their programs than Scheme users.

>yes.  common-lisp emphasizes getting things done as opposed to
>strictly maintaining language purity.  personally, i think common-lisp
>does a pretty good job on both counts.

To first talk about the languages as things in
themselves: Scheme and CL are identical in their
approach to side-effects (modulo only spelling).  They
both allow changing the bindings of variables, and
they both allow mutating the contents of compound
data.  (Some languages like ML allow side-effects of
the second type only, so one has to mimic assignable
variables by defining a pro-forma compound datum
called the reference.  References require special
syntax for mere access, which Scheme and CL
variables don't.) You'd be shortchanging yourself if
you used side-effects as a litmus to choose one of
Scheme or CL over the other.

To next talk about usage: I disagree with the
speculation that Scheme usage is more leery of
side-effects, even if the language allows them.  Both
Scheme and CL have a non-imperative core, and users in
both languages make forays out of this _as the
situation demands_.  Of course no one is going to use
side-effects (or _anything_) gratuitously, not even in
the C world, where assignment is used because it is
the only way to solve a problem (another way of
looking at this is that C's non-imperative core is not
powerful enough).  In Scheme and Common Lisp, it isn't
that side-effects are curtailed, but that alternatives
exist in the form of really powerful procedural
constructs, and naturally they also find use.  The
full power of side-effects is nevertheless still
there.

No influential Scheme group is side-effect-shy, but
even so, the Scheme community I followed (Rice,
Indiana) is extremely active in the imperative aspect
of Scheme, fending off as it did the prevailing myth
at the time that you cannot have mathematically
reasonable languages that also had imperative
features.  It has done extensive work charting out the
imperative landscape of Scheme, mapping it into two
categories, i.e., State and Control.  Some of the most
persuasive elucidation that a purely functional
approach (however higher-order) is weaker than its
combination with imperative features comes from this
community.  Even the most idle surfing of the
Scheme offerings on the Rice web site will put to rest
any concerns you may have that side-effects receive
but cursory treatment in the Scheme world.

If you find Scheme useful and you like it, explore
it.  Same goes for CL.  Avoid getting trapped in pat
binarisms.  I wish you success and fun in your
explorations!

--d


 
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Shiv  
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 More options Jul 24 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Shiv <s...@balrog.ece.ucsb.edu>
Date: 2000/07/24
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming

It requires a certain mindset to be a good CL programmer (as opposed
to a good C programmer). Similarly, to ge a good "purely functional
non-strict" language (eg. Clean) programmer it requires a different
mindset. For many people the lack of side-effects is intolerable
(rightly so, as evidenced by the reactions in this thread). Usually
one is forced into passing the state around, and this can become
intolerable if designed inappropriately. The monadic-style is to hide
the state, say in an abstract datatype (or just by discipline), and
provide operators that will sequence actions and pass the state around
under the covers. {Aside: for a beautiful use of monadic-style in Caml
see the sources for fftw in www.fftw.org}. The monadic style is
popular in ML (and its variants), Haskell, etc.. The Clean
(www.cs.kun.nl/~clean) approach is a little bit more palatable. It has
the notion of uniqueness types whereby you can declare that some
object will not be shared by anything else when a function is
invoked. Since side-effects are only a problem when sharing is
present, this effectively overcomes it, and you get destructive
updates in a functional manner. So you can get arrays to behave like
arrays. However, this is does not make CL+CLOS! But, good Clean (or
Haskell) programmers have done pretty well. For example Clean has its
entire IDE written in Clean! A stateful task done well.

So before shooting all the children of Lisp (after all that is what
ML, Haskell, Clean, etc. are) it might be worth your effort to take a
closer look. If you want to take a look at only one, may I suggest
Clean? As somebody else already mentioned, these languages really
emphasize strong typing with type inferencing as one of their strong
points besides functional style and/or laziness. They also have some
neat features like list and array comprehensions. Of course, many of
these features could possibly be added to CL via macros and
stuff. Have fun!!

--shiv--


 
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Xah  
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 More options Jul 24 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Xah <x...@xahlee.org>
Date: 2000/07/24
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming
Kent M Pitman <pit...@world.std.com> 24 Jul 2000 03:53:43 GMT wrote:

> - What do you think is going on in someone's head when they
> "think about" something? That is, do you think it's an excerise
> in "functional process" (e.g., side-effect-free decomposition or
> some such)  or "imperative process" (manipulation of the stateful
> stuff you seem to abhor so) or how would you characterize it?

this is a silly question. Do you think deity exist? Do you think they are
sexy?

These type of questions belong to metaphysics, classical philosophy, and
classical psychology. They are passé in our info age, except that Freudian
theories are still used by shrinks to comfort people and shrinking their
wallets.

What's _thinking_ anyway? How do you know that my existence isn't just your
fancy? (after all, it is in your head.) For these questions, better dig
neuroscience and information science for answers.

Furthermore, "functional" and "imperative" describe computation
methodologies that we invented. Why do you assume that these notions are
applicable (or maps) to how our brain processes? Are you supposing that
human thinking has been completely understood or codified? You are forcing a
simile. (or "isomorphism" as you say)

(btw, _isomorphism_ is a mathematical term bearing a rigorous definition in
an axiomatic context. A lookup in dictionaries indicated that it is used in
technical contexts only. (math, biology, chemistry.) Your usage of '_proper_
isomorphism' to endeavor a sense of mathematical mapping between two totally
ill-defined and disparate things seems to me stultifying.)

Most of you have thought of the innocent question "how big is the universe",
and so have our ancestors. In hindsight, it seems foolish that our ancestors
pondered such a question without having taken a course in calculus and
learned the ins and outs of bounded and finiteness concepts. In fact, it's
quite ridiculous if modern notions of dimensionality are not present in the
questioner's mind. But actually it's truly ludicrous if we are ignorant of
shapes of space (topology) & non-Euclidean geometries. Frankly, it is a
fucking stupid question in additional light of space-time continuum of
Relativity. The point here is: what you think as sensible questions are not
always good questions.

I would suggest that anyone who are interested in philosophy in general to
follow Bertrand Russell's logical positivism school of thought, and ask not
big-time metaphysical questions or lore but study logic & linguistics &
mathematics: put your foot on solid ground.

having read so many language wars and literatures, i find it trite. The best
language, is the one with the most good unyielding mathematical properties.
The more interesting question is, the mathematical study of different
ideology of such property sets, and possible ISOMORPHISM between them.

In newsgroups, few are educated enough to be aware of such a level of
thought. They argue sugar syntaxes, they argue C++ vs Java, they argue my GC
vs your GC, they argue high-level vs low level, they argue trivial
psychology, they argue sizes, they argue petty arguments blithely and often
blindly too.

> - Notwithstanding your answer, do you give any credence to the notion of
> mental isomorphism?  That is, do you suppose there is value in having
> the "shape" of mental conceptions match the "shape" of reality (e.g.,
> to minimize the computational cost of marshalling and unmarshalling
> brain data and/or reality data, depending on which way you're going)
> or is that simply an irrelevancy?

I deem it irrelevant because such an observation is not a scientific
observation; it has little value in aiding science.

>  Likewise, do you see any value in
> reasoning in a way that is consistent with the mechanism?
> For example,
> you could model a coke machine using "statistics" or "functional
> expressions", but it seems to me there is more value to modeling it as
> a state machine since it is, in fact, such a thing.

(ok, so drinking machines are sate machines. Therefore the so called "human
thinking" jams into an excluded middle of functional/imperative?)

> If you choose to
> model something in a way that it in fact doesn't work (as pre-Kepler
> folk used to model the rotation of the planets in their spirograph-like
> curly-orbit way), don't you risk overcomplicate the simple?

Here we are talking about planetary motion, which is a matter of eye-balling
paths very well-defined and easily verified under science. You were talking
about modeling of human thought -- a not well-defined thingy -- and
insisting it "maps" to some ill-defined computational model. (Ockham's razor
would cut you to pieces.)

>  And so
> doesn't it come down to how people think?  Not how you wish them to think
> but how they in fact think?  (Can you cite experiments to show that you
> have a clear and uncontroverted theory of how they think such that you
> are sure you are not advocating dissonance between our mental models
> and our devices for aiding in computation?)

How people think?

No, i don't care how people think, but how they should think according to
knowledge. I understand the iffiness of purpose of life, i understand that
theory needs corrections, but it is science & theories that we should base
our argument or decisions on, not metaphysics, culture, fad, or what you or
me think "how people thinks".

You know well how Theories of Relativity changed thinking? Do you know how
the existence of irrational numbers changed thinking? Do you know how
non-Euclidean geometry changed thinking? Do you know how Godel's theorem
changed thinking? Do you know how Penrose Tiles changed thinking? (and so on
and on and on.)

It's not "how people think" that matters, but "what do we know about how
people think" and "what's the best way to think according to our
understanding?". What is the (scientific) value of saying "human thinks more
like imperative programing than functional decomposition"? I'm totally
flummoxed on how such mapping maps, and fear such observation can only
impede progress. As technology pushes us willy-nilly towards a pure
information age, untruths and ignorance will become the primary woe among
all vices and calamities. Cultivate one untruth, and you'd cause a damage
more devastating than mass murder.

> Sometimes, obviously, the
> technique for the computation may be well-understood and accepted; but
> where it is not, debuggability comes (it seems to me) best when people
> have some way of destructuring the problem into intelligible components;
> isomorphism between the real world and the computation isn't the only
> way to do it, but it doesn't seem to me that one should discount it as
> a ridiculous way, either, in the case where programmers want to do it.

I understand your humanitarian approach to things. Of course, mathematics
has intrinsic limitations and is of little power in the context of all
crannies of human daily affairs. I cannot use formalism to decide whether i
should kiss a girl, nor maximize my income by solving an equation. However,
science is the ONLY way of real progress. (almost "by definition".) You are
not doing computer _science_ if you stray too far from scientific
approaches. (for what's worth: what i'm doing here is the science AND art of
critical criticizing.)

What is your issue anyway? It is fine if you like Common Lisp better than
Scheme, but not fine to litter untruths such as "human nature this or that".
It is not really imperative programing that i attack in this thread, but
your skunking "humanitarian" droppings.

PS "progress" is defined as betterment of human state in general that i wish
neophyte thinkers won't moot a nitpicking.

 Xah
 x...@xahlee.org
 http://xahlee.org/PageTwo_dir/more.html


 
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Erik Naggum  
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 More options Jul 24 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.net>
Date: 2000/07/24
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming
* Frode Vatvedt Fjeld <fro...@acm.org>
| Maybe CL should have included the ability to declare a function as
| "functional" (side-effect-free, that is).

  Most Lisp compilers include such a mechanism, but the guarantee is
  even harder to maintain and guarantee than typing, and it should not
  affect correctness, so nothing is lost by considering this as part
  of the great optimization problem.

#:Erik
--
  If this is not what you expected, please alter your expectations.


 
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Robert Monfera  
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 More options Jul 25 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Robert Monfera <monf...@fisec.com>
Date: 2000/07/25
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming

Christopher Browne wrote:
> I suspect that most of those that suggest that OO is in any
> way related to FP Just Didn't Get It when they did their two
> week module on functional programming.

Polymorphism and inheritance are more important aspects of OO than
object identity (encapsulation being further down).  These two concepts
blend perfectly with FP for those completing their two week module on
functional programming.  With CLOS, it is highly possible to write
functions that return objects, which get garbage collected after a
one-time use.

Of course, there are people for whom OO is not OO without their pet
feature (e.g., those who say CLOS is not OO because it lacks
encapsulation).  

Maybe you wanted to say that object identity does not mix with FP, or
that you consider object identity the sole defining feature of OO,
polymorphism being a mere accident.  If it's the latter, maybe it's just
the side effect of your preference of imperative programming over both
FP and polymorphism.

Robert


 
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Robert Monfera  
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 More options Jul 25 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Robert Monfera <monf...@fisec.com>
Date: 2000/07/25
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming

Xah wrote:
> These type of questions belong to metaphysics, classical philosophy,
> and classical psychology. They are passé in our info age

Ever heard of cognitive science and cognitive psychology in our info
age?  Had you studied it a little, you would have understood that the
brain does not necessarily solve logically isomorph problems the same
way.  Your naive fixa idea gets old fast.

Robert


 
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Kent M Pitman  
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 More options Jul 25 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Kent M Pitman <pit...@world.std.com>
Date: 2000/07/25
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming

Xah <x...@xahlee.org> writes:
> Kent M Pitman <pit...@world.std.com> 24 Jul 2000 03:53:43 GMT wrote:
> > - What do you think is going on in someone's head when they
> > "think about" something? That is, do you think it's an excerise
> > in "functional process" (e.g., side-effect-free decomposition or
> > some such)  or "imperative process" (manipulation of the stateful
> > stuff you seem to abhor so) or how would you characterize it?

> this is a silly question.

If I were implementing CORBA and talking about the efficiency of marshalling
and unmarshalling data between two processors that shared no address space,
it would make a big difference to know whether they used the same
representational systems because it would affect the computational overhead
significantly--would I have to transform each data item or could I pass
stuff essentially "straight through".  I think the issue is no less
relevant to mental-to-computer links.  And just because you can't reliably
measure how computations is represented doesn't mean it's not relevant.
Far from a silly question, I'd allege, it seems to me a central question.
Just my opinion, though.  Somehow I anticipate that your mileage will vary.

 
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Xah  
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 More options Jul 25 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Xah <x...@xahlee.org>
Date: 2000/07/25
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming
Kent & readers,

it is unfortunate that i usually find your (newsgroup) writings to be
antithesis of the logical. (same goes for Peter Gabriel's Pattern of
Software trash) I wonder if it's merely a manifestation of stylistic clash,
or some fundamental world-view incongruity in us, or simply your writings
don't shine.

Kent M Pitman <pit...@world.std.com> 25 Jul 2000 07:14:01 GMT wrote:

> If I were implementing CORBA and talking about the efficiency of marshalling
> and unmarshalling data between two processors that shared no address space,
> it would make a big difference to know whether they used the same
> representational systems because it would affect the computational overhead
> significantly--would I have to transform each data item or could I pass
> stuff essentially "straight through".

Fine example of a computing task that i could imagine.

> I think the issue is no less
> relevant to mental-to-computer links.

Where is your support for this opinion? It doesn't really connect to the
previous example or address my criticism.

> And just because you can't reliably
> measure how computations is represented doesn't mean it's not relevant.

Yeah, but just because you can cite a "just because" doesn't mean it's
relevant. I want to see buttresses of your fancy edifice.

> Far from a silly question, I'd allege, it seems to me a central question.

A central pitfall, perhaps. Mumble jumble i insist.

> Just my opinion, though.  Somehow I anticipate that your mileage will vary.

peace, brother!!

 Xah
 x...@xahlee.org
 http://www.xahlee.org/PageTwo_dir/more.html


 
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Tim Bradshaw  
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 More options Jul 25 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Tim Bradshaw <t...@cley.com>
Date: 2000/07/25
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming

* Duane Rettig wrote:
> Why are we talking about bricks and concrete in a lisp newsgroup?

After long experiment it was found preferable to talking about why
Lisp is slower than C++...

--tim


 
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Erik Naggum  
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 More options Jul 25 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Erik Naggum <e...@naggum.net>
Date: 2000/07/25
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming
* Xah <x...@xahlee.org>
| it is unfortunate that i usually find your (newsgroup) writings to
| be antithesis of the logical. (same goes for Peter Gabriel's Pattern
| of Software trash) I wonder if it's merely a manifestation of
| stylistic clash, or some fundamental world-view incongruity in us,
| or simply your writings don't shine.

  Or it could simply be a consequence of the fact that you're the only
  sane person in the whole entire universe.

#:Erik
--
  If this is not what you expected, please alter your expectations.


 
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Reini Urban  
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 More options Jul 25 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: rur...@sbox.tu-graz.ac.at (Reini Urban)
Date: 2000/07/25
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming

Duane Rettig wrote:
>Why are we talking about bricks and concrete in a lisp newsgroup?

indeed. it's summer and some really should be talking about icecream and
its various flavors. time is not ready for architecture yet.
--
Zur Einschätzung der aktuellen Situation in Ö
http://www.tuwien.ac.at/diskurs/

 
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Reini Urban  
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 More options Jul 25 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: rur...@sbox.tu-graz.ac.at (Reini Urban)
Date: 2000/07/25
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming

Erik Naggum wrote:
>* Xah <x...@xahlee.org>
>| it is unfortunate that i usually find your (newsgroup) writings to
>| be antithesis of the logical. (same goes for Peter Gabriel's Pattern
>| of Software trash) I wonder if it's merely a manifestation of
>| stylistic clash, or some fundamental world-view incongruity in us,
>| or simply your writings don't shine.

>  Or it could simply be a consequence of the fact that you're the only
>  sane person in the whole entire universe.

now this *IS* logical to me.
(though I still don't understand ~three postmodern words per
xah-sentence)

 
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Rainer Joswig  
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 More options Jul 26 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Rainer Joswig <rainer.jos...@ision.net>
Date: 2000/07/26
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming
In article <lc8zur8cr8....@balrog.ece.ucsb.edu>, Shiv

<s...@balrog.ece.ucsb.edu> wrote:
> Clean? As somebody else already mentioned, these languages really
> emphasize strong typing with type inferencing as one of their strong
> points besides functional style and/or laziness. They also have some
> neat features like list and array comprehensions. Of course, many of
> these features could possibly be added to CL via macros and
> stuff. Have fun!!

As you might imagine, most of these "features" are available
for CL or for subsets of CL. Type inferencing, list
comprehensions, etc have been added several times to CL.

Remember, Common Lisp is a language laboratory.

--
Rainer Joswig, BU Partner,
ISION Internet AG, Steinhöft 9, 20459 Hamburg, Germany
Tel: +49 40 3070 2950, Fax: +49 40 3070 2999
Email: mailto:rainer.jos...@ision.net WWW: http://www.ision.net/


 
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Rainer Joswig  
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 More options Jul 26 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Rainer Joswig <rainer.jos...@ision.net>
Date: 2000/07/26
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming
In article <lc8zur8cr8....@balrog.ece.ucsb.edu>, Shiv

<s...@balrog.ece.ucsb.edu> wrote:
> It requires a certain mindset to be a good CL programmer (as opposed
> to a good C programmer).

No, you don't need a certain "mindset". Common Lisp supports
one hundred different mindsets.

Giving up mental blockades helps, though.

--
Rainer Joswig, BU Partner,
ISION Internet AG, Steinhöft 9, 20459 Hamburg, Germany
Tel: +49 40 3070 2950, Fax: +49 40 3070 2999
Email: mailto:rainer.jos...@ision.net WWW: http://www.ision.net/


 
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Wolfhard Buß  
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 More options Jul 26 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: wb...@gmx.net (Wolfhard Buß)
Date: 2000/07/26
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming

Rainer Joswig <rainer.jos...@ision.net> writes:
> As you might imagine, most of these "features" are available
> for CL or for subsets of CL. Type inferencing, list
> comprehensions, etc have been added several times to CL.

Any references?

-wb


 
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William Deakin  
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 More options Jul 26 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: William Deakin <w.dea...@pindar.com>
Date: 2000/07/26
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming

Reini Urban wrote:
> (though I still don't understand ~three postmodern words per

What is a postmodern word?

;)will


 
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Rainer Joswig  
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 More options Jul 26 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Rainer Joswig <rainer.jos...@ision.net>
Date: 2000/07/26
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming
In article <m3puo1z970....@minka.katzen.ol>, wb...@gmx.net (Wolfhard

Buß) wrote:
> Rainer Joswig <rainer.jos...@ision.net> writes:

> > As you might imagine, most of these "features" are available
> > for CL or for subsets of CL. Type inferencing, list
> > comprehensions, etc have been added several times to CL.

> Any references?

> -wb

Type inferencing/checking:
 - CMU CL
 - SEQUEL
 - ACL2
 - http://www.dcs.qmw.ac.uk/SEL-HPC/Articles/GeneratedHtml/functional.im...
 - The Nimble Type Inferencer for Common Lisp-84
   http://citeseer.nj.nec.com/cachedpage/87589/1

For list comprehension things, the CMU Lisp archive
should lead to success or look for old comp.lang.lisp
postings.

Examples:

(defun qsort (ax)
  (and ax
       (let ((a (car ax))
             (x (cdr ax)))
         (append (qsort [y (y <- x) (< y a)])
                 (list a)
                 (qsort [y (y <- x) (>= y a)])))))

(miranda perms (x)
  ()      => '(())
  (_ . _) => [(cons a p)
                (a <- x)
                (p <- (perms (remove a x :count 1)))])

--
Rainer Joswig, BU Partner,
ISION Internet AG, Steinhöft 9, 20459 Hamburg, Germany
Tel: +49 40 3070 2950, Fax: +49 40 3070 2999
Email: mailto:rainer.jos...@ision.net WWW: http://www.ision.net/


 
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Reini Urban  
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 More options Jul 26 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: rur...@sbox.tu-graz.ac.at (Reini Urban)
Date: 2000/07/26
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming

William Deakin wrote:
>Reini Urban wrote:
>> (though I still don't understand ~three postmodern words per

>What is a postmodern word?

I cannot tell you exactly now what it is, because I don't understand it,
as I said, I can only show you what I mean. First I try it with some
examples picked from random sentences:

xah sentence #1:
  "it is unfortunate that i usually find your (newsgroup) writings to be
antithesis of the logical."

xah sentence #2:
  "(same goes for Peter Gabriel's Pattern of Software trash) I wonder if
it's merely a manifestation of stylistic clash, or some fundamental
world-view incongruity in us, or simply your writings don't shine."

xah sentence #3:
  "this is a silly question. Do you think deity exist? Do you think they
are sexy?"

pm words in #1:  "antithesis of the logical"
pm words in #2: "Pattern of Software trash", "world-view incongruity"
pm words in #3: deity, exist, sexy

proofs of concept:
  http://www.elsewhere.org/cgi-bin/postmodern/
  To some extent also:
  http://www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~zelenski/rsg/grammars/

ideology:
  (Unfortunately I have my own postmodernism ramblings only in german,
   so)
  A positivistic approach to postmodernism in computer languages:
  http://www.wall.org/~larry/pm.html  

rationale:
  I see words taken from new fields and put into an old and closed
context. This would not be harmful per se. The problem is that I don't
understand the reason to use such words in this context. Is just the
word that makes no sense or is the whole sentence?
  My guess -and that is why I said "postmodern"- that the author wants
to hide the fact that he doesn't understand any meaning of our words or
sentences, so he tooks "random" but interesting or may-fit words,
applies them to our trash of sentences (in his view) to criticize our
methods to communicate. This is a interesting deconstructive method but
unfortunately only interesting to folks who don't understand the
comp.lang.lisp level of communication, and worse for me, completely non
understandable from his point of view because I don't know the original
context where he took these words from. The criticized words and
sentences make perfect sense for me, and the irritations are
non-constructive.

--
Zur Einschätzung der aktuellen Situation in Ö
http://www.tuwien.ac.at/diskurs/


 
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Xah  
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 More options Jul 26 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Xah <x...@xahlee.org>
Date: 2000/07/26
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming

Reini Urban wrote:
> (though I still don't understand ~three postmodern words per
> xah-sentence)

William Deakin <w.dea...@pindar.com> 26 Jul 2000 07:53:27 GMT wrote:

> What is a postmodern word?

C'mon people, there are dictionaries on the web. Look up and savor every
word. What's your rush?

my American Heritage dictionary (1995) says:
postmodern or post-modern adj. 1. Of or relating to art, architecture, or
literature that reacts against earlier modernist principles, as by
reintroducing traditional or classical elements of style or by carrying
modernist styles or practices to extremes: ³the post-modern mode of tapering
the tops of buildings²  Jane Holtz Kay

Not until i looked up this word now, i find sense in Larry Wall's outcry:
"Perl is a postmodern language".

Larry Wall is at the minimum an _artful_ criminal. One could disregard his
damages to the computing world, and enjoy his writings.

Kent Pitman, you still haven't answered my question about what you think of
Perl. (could you indulge ME and answer that?) Was Perl, in your opinion, a
language based on fine principles?

 Xah
 x...@xahlee.org
 http://www.xahlee.org/PageTwo_dir/more.html
 "Disclaiming claim: I'm insane."


 
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William Deakin  
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 More options Jul 26 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: William Deakin <w.dea...@pindar.com>
Date: 2000/07/26
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming

Xah wrote:
> William Deakin <w.dea...@pindar.com> 26 Jul 2000 07:53:27 GMT wrote:
> > What is a postmodern word?

> C'mon people, there are dictionaries on the web. Look up and savor every
> word.

Thanks for the advice. What I wanted to know, however, is what a
postmodern word was (as opposed to a modernist, neo-gothic or romantist
word, say).

> Not until i looked up this word now, i find sense in Larry Wall's outcry:
> "Perl is a postmodern language".

> Larry Wall is at the minimum an _artful_ criminal. One could disregard his
> damages to the computing world, and enjoy his writings.

Yup.

:)will


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Off Topic: postmodernism [Was: Curious about functional programming]" by William Deakin
William Deakin  
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 More options Jul 26 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: William Deakin <w.dea...@pindar.com>
Date: 2000/07/26
Subject: Off Topic: postmodernism [Was: Curious about functional programming]

Reini Urban wrote:

> William Deakin wrote:
> >Reini Urban wrote:
> >> (though I still don't understand ~three postmodern words per

> >What is a postmodern word?

[...elided interesting stuff about postmodernism...]
> rationale:
>   I see words taken from new fields and put into an old and closed
> context. This would not be harmful per se. The problem is that I don't
> understand the reason to use such words in this context.

Art, or could it be an AI language gigger bug?

>Is just the word that makes no sense or is the whole sentence?

(Wishing he was not going to open up a whole Witgensitian can of worms
:) My take on this is that meaning of words in a sentence depends on the
the other words in the sentence and the context in which the sentence is
used. In this case the word can never `make sense' except in the context
of the sentence. Following on from this, to talk about a word making
sense or not is senseless -- that is it neither makes sense or not. But
hey ho, back to sendmail configuration.

>   My guess -and that is why I said "postmodern"- that the author wants
> to hide the fact that he doesn't understand any meaning of our words or
> sentences, so he tooks "random" but interesting or may-fit words,
> applies them to our trash of sentences (in his view) to criticize our
> methods to communicate.

Or is generating the text automatically.

> This is a interesting deconstructive method but unfortunately only
> interesting to folks who don't understand the  comp.lang.lisp level of
> communication,

Unless c.l.l is being used in a different way. That is, some kind of
conceptual art experiment (this is where you have try and divine some
kind of purpose or aesthetic meaning behind the text rather than
divining any kind of sense) or some kind of elaborate programming text
generation prank (like henley)[1]; And not using c.l.l. as a place to
talk about problems and issues with lisp.

> and worse for me, completely non-understandable from his
> point of view because I don't know the original context where he took
> these words from.

Yup. Unless they are words statistically selected from a dictionary.

Anyway, thanks for your the explaination of postmodernism,

:)will

[1] But written using functional programming :)


 
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Discussion subject changed to "Curious about functional programming" by Cor Gest jr
Cor Gest jr  
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 More options Jul 26 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Cor Gest jr <c...@clsnet.nl>
Date: 2000/07/26
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming

I'm getting really confused now.

Poor me, in all innocent-ignorance, I always thougt that the
only state of any Function(ality) in/or any other whatever-state or
function for that matter has to be a *working state*.

As in most cases, if not all, it is *that* state that pays the mortgage.

Maybe it's time to get a Phd. in Programmer-lingo-phylosophy or just
go on wasting my time on earning the can of spam for the daily-bread.

cor

--
/*#include<rumor.h> Everything is relative.........even that */
/* If GNU/LINUX has no solution, you'v got the wrong problem */
/* Never install Slackware.........You might learn to use IT */
/* pa3...@amsat.org    ICQ:1612519    http://clsnet.dynip.nl */


 
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William Deakin  
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 More options Jul 26 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: William Deakin <w.dea...@pindar.com>
Date: 2000/07/26
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming
Cor Gest jr wrote:
> As in most cases, if not all, it is *that* state that pays the mortgage.

But what do you do on the weekends?

:)will


 
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Xah  
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 More options Jul 26 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: Xah <x...@xahlee.org>
Date: 2000/07/26
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming

Reini Urban (rur...@sbox.tu-graz.ac.at) 26 Jul 2000 11:11:38 GMT wrote:

> [postmodern words]...
> rationale:
> I see words taken from new fields and put into an old and closed
> context. This would not be harmful per se. The problem is that I don't
> understand the reason to use such words in this context. Is just the
> word that makes no sense or is the whole sentence?
> My guess -and that is why I said "postmodern"- that the author wants
> to hide the fact that he doesn't understand any meaning of our words or
> sentences, so he tooks "random" but interesting or may-fit words,
> applies them to our trash of sentences (in his view) to criticize our
> methods to communicate.

I hope this is honest. Though i doubt it is written without spices. Exactly
what you mean by: "that the author wants to hide the fact that he doesn't
understand any meaning of our words or sentences"? Which sentence or words
or idea do you suppose i didn't understand in Kent's post? Or, perhaps you
are referring to Kent's generic thought model or approach that i didn't
like?

> This is a interesting deconstructive method but
> unfortunately only interesting to folks who don't understand the
> comp.lang.lisp level of communication

Do you really suppose that i'm such a dumb ass? Pray-explain in detail. Make
a fool of me, or yourself. I'm eager to learn -- that you are a square.

> , and worse for me, completely non
> understandable from his point of view because I don't know the original
> context where he took these words from. The criticized words and
> sentences make perfect sense for me, and the irritations are
> non-constructive.

Perhaps i failed in communication to Pitman-alikes. If you just ask, i'd be
happy to explain any sentence or intentions or origins or allegories or
allusions or recondite wisdom you couldn't grasp. If you ask nicely, i'd be
happy to re-write my post (you pick) in a completely flat, no highbrow
words, down-to-earth, no figures of speech, dry, 100% content 0% dressing,
symbolic-logic manner.

The modern world is full pitiful foolscap wearers in uniform.

PS while trying to find the name for the square cap worn by Ph.D.s, i found
this hilarious essay:
http://www.princeton.edu/~ekowalsk/phd.html

 Xah
 x...@xahlee.org
 http://www.xahlee.org/PageTwo_dir/more.html


 
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Suchandra Thapa  
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 More options Jul 26 2000, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
From: ssth...@midway.uchicago.edu (Suchandra Thapa)
Date: 2000/07/26
Subject: Re: Curious about functional programming

Shiv <s...@balrog.ece.ucsb.edu> wrote:
>So before shooting all the children of Lisp (after all that is what
>ML, Haskell, Clean, etc. are) it might be worth your effort to take a
>closer look. If you want to take a look at only one, may I suggest
>Clean? As somebody else already mentioned, these languages really
>emphasize strong typing with type inferencing as one of their strong
>points besides functional style and/or laziness. They also have some
>neat features like list and array comprehensions. Of course, many of
>these features could possibly be added to CL via macros and
>stuff. Have fun!!

    I'm not sure if Clean if the best language to get into.  The biggest
problem with clean is that the source code to the compiler isn't available
so if the binaries provided don't work for you, you're out of luck.  Plus
there is only one implementation of Clean available.  Because of this
I think ML (for example Ocaml) or Haskell are probably better choices.  

--
------------------------------------------------------------------

Suchandra S. Thapa
s-th...@uchicago.edu

------------------------------------------------------------------


 
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