71 projects tagged "Common Lisp"
Charlemagne is a versatile genetic programming application. It includes a commandline client and an interactive console mode. It is written in Python and Lisp, and is user extensible to some degree in both languages. It features built-in input-output mapping support and provides the ability to define complex fitness calculations in Lisp or Python.
CL-Readline is an UFFI-based Common Lisp interface to the GNU Readline library. In addition to basic Readline functionality it features customizable completions, completions based on a Common Lisp package, multi-line expression reader, and support for non-echoing input. This software has been superseded by Linedit.
The Regex Coach is a graphical application for Linux and Windows which can be used to experiment with (Perl-compatible) regular expressions interactively. It shows whether a regular expression matches a particular target string, and can also show which parts of the target string correspond to captured register groups or to arbitrary parts of the regular expression. It can "walk" through the target string one match at a time and simulate Perl's split and s/// (substitution) operators. It tries to describe the regular expression in plain English. It can show a graphical representation of the regular expression's parse tree. It can single-step through the matching process as performed by the regex engine. Everything happens in "real time" (i.e., as soon as you make a change somewhere in the application all other parts are instantly updated).
CL-PPCRE is a portable regular expression library for Common Lisp. It is compatible with Perl, and it's fast, portable (strictly ANSI-compliant), and thread-safe. It comes with convenient features like a SPLIT function, a couple of DO-like loop constructs, and a regex-based APROPOS feature similar to the one found in Emacs. In addition to specifying regular expressions as strings like in Perl, you can also use S-expressions which are more Lisp-y.
CL-BibTeX is a replacement for the BibTeX program, written in Common Lisp. The aim is to enable the user to format bibliographic entries using Common Lisp programs, rather than using the stack language of BibTeX style files. A compiler that transforms BibTeX style files into comprehensible Common Lisp programs is included.
Allegro Common Lisp is a full ANSI Common Lisp (1994) implementation. It contains many extensions, including 32- and 64-bit native compilation, efficient built-in memory management, foreign functions (for interfacing with other languages), multiprocessing, UNICODE and locale support, XML/HTML parsers, a Web client and server, GTK+ interface (1.2 and 2.0), Java interface, OLE interface (Windows only), profiler, regular expressions, an XML RPC implementation, native Lisp RPC, sockets, DLL and shared library support, and more.
ILISP is a package that is designed to integrate various Lisp implementations (mostly Common Lisp systems and various Scheme dialects, including Guile) within Emacs (or XEmacs). ILISP runs an inferior Lisp process (in Emacs parlance) and provides a specialized set of commands, key bindings, and menus to ease the interaction with it. ILISP commands access the underlying Lisp process and provide ways to make the editing, compilation, and execution of Lisp programs much easier.