This library implements the Atlas protocol, for use in client-server
game applications. This library is suitable for linking to either
clients or servers.
This is an implementation of an infix reader macro. It should run in any
valid Common Lisp and has been tested in Allegro CL 4.1, Lucid CL 4.0.1,
MCL 2.0 and CMU CL. It allows the user to type arithmetic expressions in
the traditional way (e.g., 1+2) when writing Lisp programs instead of
using the normal Lisp syntax (e.g., (+ 1 2)). It is not intended to be a
full replacement for the normal Lisp syntax.
This package is compiled with SBCL.
Written by Mark Kantrowitz, School of Computer Science,
Carnegie Mellon University, March 1993.
This it the book "GNU AUTOCONF, AUTOMAKE AND LIBTOOL" by Gary V.
Vaughan, Ben Elliston, Tom Tromey and Ian Lance Taylor.
The book is installed as share/doc/autobook/autobook.html
CLOCC Port provides a portable interface to various features absent
from the ANSI Common Lisp standard, such as sockets, multiprocessing,
calling external programs, Gray streams etc.
This package contains binaries compiled for SBCL.
This port installs a wrapper script for autoconf, with symlinks to the
unversioned name of each tool included with autoconf. This allows the
correct version to be selected depending on the user's requirements.
split-sequence is a small library to split sequences in to a list of
subsequences delimited by an object satisfying a test function. It is
a member of the Common Lisp Utilities family of programs, designed by
community consensus.
trivial-features ensures consistent *FEATURES* across multiple
Common Lisp implementations.
For example, on MacOS X platforms, while most Lisps push :DARWIN
to *FEATURES*, CLISP and Allegro push :MACOS and :MACOSX instead,
respectively. Some Lisps might not push any feature suggesting MacOS
X at all. trivial-features will make sure all Lisps will have :DARWIN
in the *FEATURES* list when running on MacOS X.
This package is compiled with SBCL.
This port installs a wrapper script for automake, with symlinks to the
unversioned name of each tool included with automake. This allows the
correct version to be selected depending on the user's requirements.
trivial-gray-streams is a trivial library which provides an extremely
thin compatibility layer for Gray streams.
From David N. Gray's STREAM-DEFINITION-BY-USER proposal:
"Common Lisp does not provide a standard way for users to define
their own streams for use by the standard I/O functions. This impedes
the development of window systems for Common Lisp because, while
there are standard Common Lisp I/O functions and there are beginning
to be standard window systems, there is no portable way to connect
them together to make a portable Common Lisp window system. There
are also many applications where users might want to define their
own filter streams for doing things like printer device control,
report formatting, character code translation, or encryption/decryption."
This package is compiled with SBCL.
ClanLib delivers a platform independent interface to write games with. If a
game is written with ClanLib, it should be possible to compile the game under
any platform (supported by ClanLib, that is) without changes in the application
source code.
But ClanLib is not just a wrapper library, providing an common interface to
low level libraries such as DirectX, Svgalib, X11, GGI, etc. While platform
independency is ClanLib's primary goal, it also tries to be a service-minded
game SDK. In other words, authors have put great effort in to designing the API,
to ensure ClanLib's easy of use - while maintaining it's power.