chunk_id
large_stringlengths
7
11
question_id
large_stringlengths
4
8
language
large_stringclasses
1 value
chunk_index
int64
0
5
chunk_text
large_stringlengths
148
2.58k
sparse_text
large_stringlengths
96
3.09k
dense_vector
listlengths
3.58k
3.58k
sparse_indices
listlengths
9
249
sparse_values
listlengths
9
249
export_source
large_stringclasses
1 value
48573681_c0
48573681
lisp
0
Title: lisp read command works wrong for sbcl Problem title: lisp read command works wrong for sbcl Tags: common-lisp, lisp, io-buffering Problem: lisp read command works wrong for sbcl I schlocked this example of a read function from (Land of Lisp)in to my sbcl repl and it does not show the prompt: "Please type your n...
lisp read command works wrong for sbcl lisp read command works wrong for sbcl common-lisp lisp io-buffering Please Nice WARNING COMMON-LISP-USER::SAY-HELLO DEFUN SAY-HELLO name:Nice lisp read command works wrong for sbcl I schlocked this example of a read function from (Land of Lisp)in to my sbcl repl and it does not s...
[ -0.00372314453125, -0.00025177001953125, 0.001495361328125, 0.01397705078125, -0.0162353515625, 0.02099609375, 0.01129150390625, -0.0026702880859375, -0.01190185546875, -0.00921630859375, 0.01141357421875, -0.019287109375, 0.007598876953125, -0.0185546875, 0.0113525390625, -0.012390136...
[ 400, 7008, 12301, 75101, 43240, 44691, 100, 91, 275, 34937, 39210, 4086, 254, 22995, 123759, 4209, 73398, 60873, 31436, 82707, 67616, 683, 1062, 50184, 1723, 841, 174444, 202001, 14006, 153857, 9351, 839, 2980, 21135, 27781, 32354, 94646, 111...
[ 0.131103515625, 0.2159423828125, 0.236328125, 0.2032470703125, 0.0908203125, 0.20654296875, 0.057403564453125, 0.04364013671875, 0.0772705078125, 0.154052734375, 0.117431640625, 0.0777587890625, 0.17138671875, 0.162353515625, 0.1429443359375, 0.033721923828125, 0.071044921875, 0.05...
embed
52959037_c0
52959037
lisp
0
Title: Error in Lisp: The LET binding spec is malformed Problem title: Error in Lisp: The LET binding spec is malformed Tags: sbcl, lisp, clisp, common-lisp Problem: Error in Lisp: The LET binding spec is malformed I'm really new to common Lisp and having some struggles. I'm working on a function that given x , y and a...
Error in Lisp: The LET binding spec is malformed Error in Lisp: The LET binding spec is malformed sbcl lisp clisp common-lisp 0 diagonal Error Lisp NIL AREF ARRAY LINE SB-INT:NAMED-LAMBDA BLOCK LOOP COL Error in Lisp: The LET binding spec is malformed I'm really new to common Lisp and having some struggles. I'm working...
[ -0.022216796875, 0.012939453125, -0.005767822265625, -0.0040283203125, -0.00970458984375, 0.0185546875, 0.006439208984375, 0.0130615234375, -0.0021209716796875, 0.0068359375, 0.00933837890625, 0.0162353515625, -0.005889892578125, -0.0037689208984375, 0.01361083984375, 0.0091552734375, ...
[ 212059, 23, 1261, 7008, 581, 27089, 128239, 48502, 83, 960, 5037, 297, 34937, 400, 95701, 39210, 4086, 254, 757, 207997, 541, 16444, 13685, 28482, 150144, 130028, 90944, 59537, 182512, 94202, 6538, 124448, 20880, 87569, 6183, 151994, 20697, 3...
[ 0.2188720703125, 0.0650634765625, 0.1689453125, 0.2281494140625, 0.03564453125, 0.255126953125, 0.2342529296875, 0.25732421875, 0.06268310546875, 0.16259765625, 0.2493896484375, 0.07989501953125, 0.1192626953125, 0.10711669921875, 0.0182647705078125, 0.136474609375, 0.0804443359375, ...
embed
20293571_c1
20293571
lisp
1
depends-on (#:drakma #:flexi-streams #:cl-json) :components ((:file "package") (:file "bitcoin") (:file "classes") (:file "functions"))) I feel like I'm missing something fairly obvious here - I've been looking into eval-when and other related loading functions but haven't been able to figure this out. Can someone expl...
depends-on (#:drakma #:flexi-streams #:cl-json) :components ((:file "package") (:file "bitcoin") (:file "classes") (:file "functions"))) I feel like I'm missing something fairly obvious here - I've been looking into eval-when and other related loading functions but haven't been able to figure this out. Can someone expl...
[ 0.0189208984375, 0.00634765625, -0.00921630859375, -0.002166748046875, -0.015380859375, 0.01336669921875, 0.0120849609375, 0.0025482177734375, 0.006500244140625, -0.01904296875, -0.01953125, -0.021240234375, -0.010009765625, -0.0087890625, -0.004638671875, -0.0189208984375, -0.019287...
[ 56566, 7, 191, 4904, 3366, 192, 44289, 14, 86429, 34937, 170, 1681, 277, 54137, 29822, 29102, 4588, 3137, 587, 73, 67413, 137175, 12319, 132283, 9844, 180663, 162520, 3688, 28, 1405, 434, 3220, 72367, 214, 32354, 26366, 73342, 7730, 98, 9...
[ 0.258544921875, 0.10443115234375, 0.21728515625, 0.006317138671875, 0.090576171875, 0.165283203125, 0.1444091796875, 0.074462890625, 0.2030029296875, 0.07080078125, 0.027069091796875, 0.1439208984375, 0.05108642578125, 0.194580078125, 0.13330078125, 0.15673828125, 0.017120361328125, ...
embed
43508915_c0
43508915
lisp
0
Title: Lisp common elements in a list Problem title: Lisp common elements in a list Tags: runtime-error, lisp Problem: Lisp common elements in a list We've recently started learning Common Lisp in our class. I am trying to implement a function that takes two list and outputs their common elements. We are restricted to ...
Lisp common elements in a list Lisp common elements in a list runtime-error lisp Lisp Lisp common elements in a list We've recently started learning Common Lisp in our class. I am trying to implement a function that takes two list and outputs their common elements. We are restricted to using basic functional forms. ) M...
[ 0.0011138916015625, 0.0205078125, -0.005889892578125, 0.00872802734375, -0.0020751953125, 0.026611328125, -0.001861572265625, -0.008056640625, -0.00579833984375, -0.05517578125, 0.0322265625, 0.0166015625, 0.006103515625, -0.0084228515625, -0.001434326171875, 0.01434326171875, 0.0061...
[ 1261, 7008, 39210, 80854, 23, 10, 5303, 11675, 6032, 188800, 400, 52080, 151301, 18507, 31577, 29479, 32354, 51776, 6626, 140992, 173072, 62822, 123309, 3173, 2967, 53418, 28219, 15400, 50339, 10644, 18499, 170325, 6238, 27406, 80076, 339, 1772...
[ 0.1712646484375, 0.1990966796875, 0.1846923828125, 0.2021484375, 0.0634765625, 0.02239990234375, 0.193115234375, 0.0855712890625, 0.1392822265625, 0.218017578125, 0.1258544921875, 0.03863525390625, 0.121337890625, 0.08099365234375, 0.0228271484375, 0.0970458984375, 0.1414794921875, ...
embed
8237847_c0
8237847
lisp
0
Title: How to understand segmented binomial heaps described in <Purely Functional Data Structures> Problem title: How to understand segmented binomial heaps described in <Purely Functional Data Structures> Tags: data-structures, haskell, lisp, ml, functional-programming Problem: How to understand segmented ...
How to understand segmented binomial heaps described in <Purely Functional Data Structures> How to understand segmented binomial heaps described in <Purely Functional Data Structures> data-structures haskell lisp ml functional-programming How How to understand segmented binomial heaps described in In chapte...
[ -0.00098419189453125, 0.017333984375, -0.026123046875, 0.01007080078125, -0.007049560546875, 0.02734375, -0.023681640625, -0.002593994140625, 0.011474609375, 0.01531982421875, 0.0185546875, 0.005218505859375, 0, -0.00096893310546875, 0.016845703125, -0.036865234375, 0.000785827636718...
[ 11249, 28219, 33180, 297, 333, 1687, 15403, 17305, 6423, 151552, 28670, 11809, 63667, 2053, 137656, 1556, 142508, 7008, 7115, 123309, 28966, 2289, 97109, 159688, 118233, 10763, 384, 2389, 25, 83, 3525, 53201, 30648, 757, 618, 42, 110218, 7311...
[ 0.03021240234375, 0.1937255859375, 0.2467041015625, 0.0843505859375, 0.10113525390625, 0.14404296875, 0.07244873046875, 0.18603515625, 0.1632080078125, 0.0731201171875, 0.06500244140625, 0.04180908203125, 0.04486083984375, 0.039215087890625, 0.05511474609375, 0.04931640625, 0.1640625...
embed
71617499_c0
71617499
lisp
0
Title: Dynamic bindings with let in Hy? Problem title: Dynamic bindings with let in Hy? Tags: hy, lisp Problem: Dynamic bindings with let in Hy? Comming from Common Lisp, I'm trying to use let to shadow the value of a global variable dynamically. (setv glob 18) (defn callee [] (print glob)) (defn nonl [x] (callee) (let...
Dynamic bindings with let in Hy? Dynamic bindings with let in Hy? hy lisp contextvars Dynamic cv.ContextVar cv.copy-context glob.get Dynamic bindings with let in Hy? Comming from Common Lisp, I'm trying to use let to shadow the value of a global variable dynamically. Is there a way to make this work so that the second ...
[ -0.00421142578125, -0.0023193359375, -0.0021820068359375, 0.036865234375, -0.0037078857421875, 0.0206298828125, -0.001617431640625, 0.0098876953125, 0.00191497802734375, -0.0289306640625, -0.00567626953125, 0.0147705078125, 0.0034332275390625, 0.01446533203125, 0.015380859375, -0.00369...
[ 73327, 21068, 128239, 7, 678, 2633, 23, 3905, 2119, 400, 7008, 43701, 1961, 115158, 22829, 81827, 137366, 32363, 3794, 151301, 1261, 31577, 4527, 47, 208429, 34292, 7964, 77336, 84079, 3917, 4488, 17932, 11782, 57378, 13, 76199, 5606, 144888 ...
[ 0.163330078125, 0.109130859375, 0.209716796875, 0.07501220703125, 0.08734130859375, 0.2178955078125, 0.0947265625, 0.200439453125, 0.16552734375, 0.048858642578125, 0.1407470703125, 0.1474609375, 0.1575927734375, 0.141845703125, 0.1473388671875, 0.1580810546875, 0.0897216796875, 0....
embed
49840671_c0
49840671
lisp
0
Title: LISP - How to get average length from nested list? step by step explanation Problem title: LISP - How to get average length from nested list? step by step explanation Tags: average, nested, common-lisp, lisp, list Problem: LISP - How to get average length from nested list? step by step explanation I know that th...
LISP - How to get average length from nested list? step by step explanation LISP - How to get average length from nested list? step by step explanation average nested common-lisp lisp list nested LISP How _______ LISP - How to get average length from nested list? step by step explanation I know that this answer is answ...
[ -0.0233154296875, 0.01953125, 0.002410888671875, 0.010498046875, 0.000873565673828125, 0.032958984375, 0.0322265625, 0.004791259765625, 0.01141357421875, -0.025146484375, 0.00183868408203125, -0.0189208984375, 0.01177978515625, 0.01483154296875, 0.003082275390625, 0.0030517578125, 0....
[ 16970, 9434, 11249, 2046, 83080, 140909, 1295, 8512, 71, 5303, 29954, 187136, 39210, 4086, 254, 400, 7008, 47, 390, 70, 100, 32354, 903, 71924, 18499, 4358 ]
[ 0.11279296875, 0.1949462890625, 0.054229736328125, 0.0848388671875, 0.2061767578125, 0.20947265625, 0.0882568359375, 0.207275390625, 0.1173095703125, 0.21435546875, 0.06689453125, 0.10400390625, 0.074951171875, 0.054443359375, 0.09857177734375, 0.0654296875, 0.1077880859375, 0.0268...
embed
21410189_c0
21410189
lisp
0
Title: Translating this to Common Lisp Problem title: Translating this to Common Lisp Tags: common-lisp, lisp, macros, self-reference Problem: Translating this to Common Lisp I've been reading an article by Olin Shivers titled Stylish Lisp programming techniques and found the second example there (labeled "Technique n-...
Translating this to Common Lisp Translating this to Common Lisp common-lisp lisp macros self-reference 0 Translating Common Lisp Translating this to Common Lisp I've been reading an article by Olin Shivers titled Stylish Lisp programming techniques and found the second example there (labeled "Technique n-1") a bit puzz...
[ 0.006561279296875, 0.0172119140625, 0.0021209716796875, 0.01104736328125, 0.01446533203125, 0.01220703125, -0.00872802734375, -0.00341796875, 0.0162353515625, -0.058349609375, -0.003570556640625, 0.012939453125, -0.006378173828125, -0.003936767578125, 0.022705078125, -0.00750732421875,...
[ 11062, 143, 1916, 903, 47, 151301, 1261, 7008, 39210, 4086, 254, 400, 111789, 15970, 239879, 757, 16454, 5582, 106727, 8294, 7864, 119926, 4745, 56037, 53088, 17932, 27781, 43721, 45602, 653, 5759, 4785, 2638, 13894, 2069, 98363, 13415, 15113...
[ 0.1326904296875, 0.180908203125, 0.074951171875, 0.1644287109375, 0.146728515625, 0.1837158203125, 0.1971435546875, 0.1907958984375, 0.1248779296875, 0.1219482421875, 0.145263671875, 0.1080322265625, 0.2327880859375, 0.196533203125, 0.202880859375, 0.028228759765625, 0.04913330078125...
embed
20058947_c0
20058947
lisp
0
Title: LISP - get last list of a list Problem title: LISP - get last list of a list Tags: lisp, recursion, common-lisp, list Problem: LISP - get last list of a list I'm trying to figure out how to obtain the last (non-empty) list from within another list, or return nil if there is no such list (recursively). This is an...
LISP - get last list of a list LISP - get last list of a list lisp recursion common-lisp list LISP NIL lastele2 LISP - get last list of a list I'm trying to figure out how to obtain the last (non-empty) list from within another list, or return nil if there is no such list (recursively). This is an homework assignment, ...
[ 0.0059814453125, 0.023193359375, 0.01214599609375, 0.003143310546875, -0.01416015625, 0.0211181640625, 0.004058837890625, -0.0235595703125, 0.00994873046875, -0.00096893310546875, 0.01025390625, -0.004119873046875, 0.01031494140625, -0.0118408203125, 0.00089263916015625, 0.013366699218...
[ 16970, 9434, 2046, 4568, 5303, 111, 10, 400, 7008, 195625, 1830, 39210, 4086, 254, 541, 16444, 576, 3025, 304, 31577, 26366, 113054, 6431, 33548, 939, 28032, 15700, 30646, 17324, 2174, 110, 6044, 107, 48650, 18244, 95486, 4358, 55300, 18151...
[ 0.1463623046875, 0.2059326171875, 0.1348876953125, 0.229736328125, 0.23828125, 0.1129150390625, 0.0149993896484375, 0.10760498046875, 0.1727294921875, 0.1690673828125, 0.05267333984375, 0.091064453125, 0.08917236328125, 0.1468505859375, 0.06378173828125, 0.1239013671875, 0.0432434082...
embed
9369183_c1
9369183
lisp
1
0 errors, 0 warnings home:~/clisp/ercpp/compiling-program$ I got similar results with successful run and unsuccessful compile with variant 2: (clc:clc-require :cl-ppcre) Code signals: /usr/share/common-lisp/systems/cl-ppcre.asd, #, cl-ppcre, asdf:load-system, cl-ppcre:regex-replace-all, a3.lisp, Loading, cl-ppcre.asd, ...
0 errors, 0 warnings home:~/clisp/ercpp/compiling-program$ I got similar results with successful run and unsuccessful compile with variant 2: (clc:clc-require :cl-ppcre) Code signals: /usr/share/common-lisp/systems/cl-ppcre.asd, #, cl-ppcre, asdf:load-system, cl-ppcre:regex-replace-all, a3.lisp, Loading, cl-ppcre.asd, ...
[ -0.01019287109375, -0.015625, -0.0009918212890625, 0.018310546875, -0.0211181640625, 0.0177001953125, 0.006195068359375, 0.0035858154296875, 0.002410888671875, 0.004974365234375, -0.0047607421875, 0.01312255859375, 0.002777099609375, -0.0172119140625, 0.0142822265625, -0.00872802734375...
[ 757, 18499, 7, 4, 1631, 6977, 5368, 4086, 254, 56, 238, 6366, 58875, 49725, 18749, 21373, 50339, 65771, 11675, 136, 51, 226534, 7844, 9969, 1340, 678, 20117, 15573, 32838, 107, 3181, 34937, 9, 7612, 16, 28864, 26073, 223, 67886, 3796, 1...
[ 0.1353759765625, 0.1649169921875, 0.04180908203125, 0.01361083984375, 0.06787109375, 0.0239410400390625, 0.0401611328125, 0.1356201171875, 0.22998046875, 0.00390625, 0.08349609375, 0.208251953125, 0.147705078125, 0.172119140625, 0.1795654296875, 0.109375, 0.133544921875, 0.18212890...
embed
2571401_c0
2571401
lisp
0
Title: Why exactly is eval evil? Problem title: Why exactly is eval evil? Tags: eval, common-lisp, lisp, scheme, clojure Problem: Why exactly is eval evil? I know that Lisp and Scheme programmers usually say that eval should be avoided unless strictly necessary. I’ve seen the same recommendation for several programming...
Why exactly is eval evil? Why exactly is eval evil? eval common-lisp lisp scheme clojure Why GOTO Why exactly is eval evil? I know that Lisp and Scheme programmers usually say that eval should be avoided unless strictly necessary. I’ve seen the same recommendation for several programming languages, but I’ve not yet see...
[ 0.0031890869140625, 0.0157470703125, 0.01007080078125, 0.018798828125, 0.000652313232421875, -0.00439453125, 0.0076904296875, -0.004547119140625, -0.00323486328125, -0.047119140625, 0.005279541015625, -0.0194091796875, -0.004302978515625, 0.002349853515625, -0.0005950927734375, 0.00497...
[ 44084, 66161, 83, 28, 1405, 5115, 39210, 4086, 254, 400, 7008, 150370, 20450, 461, 107, 527, 58796, 3714, 1261, 136, 34702, 282, 77848, 56104, 5154, 5608, 71864, 117934, 81113, 63559, 67330, 56037, 46876, 34735, 10750, 26548, 4527, 111, 154...
[ 0.156494140625, 0.1429443359375, 0.10791015625, 0.1236572265625, 0.297607421875, 0.242919921875, 0.0537109375, 0.064453125, 0.0870361328125, 0.063720703125, 0.15283203125, 0.14208984375, 0.06793212890625, 0.07080078125, 0.0284423828125, 0.0880126953125, 0.252685546875, 0.0242614746...
embed
46800375_c0
46800375
lisp
0
Title: Common Lisp random dices Problem title: Common Lisp random dices Tags: dice, lisp, random, common-lisp Problem: Common Lisp random dices I´m a beginner of c. Lisp and actually i´ve got some problems with my first code. The topic was a "dicegame" with random numbers. If you get two 1 you win or if you get two 6 y...
Common Lisp random dices Common Lisp random dices dice lisp random common-lisp Common Lisp Common Lisp random dices I´m a beginner of c. Lisp and actually i´ve got some problems with my first code. The topic was a "dicegame" with random numbers. If you get two 1 you win or if you get two 6 you also win. First i´ve wort...
[ 0.00885009765625, -0.000579833984375, 0.01214599609375, 0.006072998046875, 0.00909423828125, 0.014404296875, -0.006866455078125, 0.007476806640625, -0.021728515625, -0.0185546875, 0.01507568359375, 0.0185546875, -0.01519775390625, 0.0103759765625, 0.0128173828125, 0.0245361328125, 0....
[ 151301, 1261, 7008, 96759, 13747, 7, 400, 39210, 4086, 254, 87, 9842, 1679, 501, 20653, 44402, 5117, 18151, 28451, 48226, 35311, 101935, 4263, 2046, 6626, 106, 19916, 707, 305, 2843, 23972, 272, 15492, 903, 442, 56112, 18, 20697, 50339, 6...
[ 0.1802978515625, 0.1751708984375, 0.2178955078125, 0.1927490234375, 0.1954345703125, 0.050811767578125, 0.127197265625, 0.14013671875, 0.102783203125, 0.1334228515625, 0.002471923828125, 0.029022216796875, 0.053558349609375, 0.061279296875, 0.03326416015625, 0.0849609375, 0.070007324...
embed
37489217_c0
37489217
lisp
0
Title: Exporting with ox-publish, can not assign variable to Keyword Problem title: Exporting with ox-publish, can not assign variable to Keyword Tags: emacs, lisp, org-mode, elisp Problem: Exporting with ox-publish, can not assign variable to Keyword I have a working setup with ox-publish and now i am trying to organi...
Exporting with ox-publish, can not assign variable to Keyword Exporting with ox-publish, can not assign variable to Keyword emacs lisp org-mode elisp Exporting Keyword todo_html Wrong Exporting with ox-publish, can not assign variable to Keyword I have a working setup with ox-publish and now i am trying to organize it....
[ 0.0186767578125, 0.01531982421875, 0.00445556640625, -0.00531005859375, -0.0137939453125, 0.0101318359375, -0.0172119140625, 0.005615234375, -0.01409912109375, 0.02197265625, -0.006988525390625, 0.01129150390625, 0.01422119140625, 0.0191650390625, -0.0098876953125, 0.01324462890625, ...
[ 134456, 678, 36, 425, 179193, 831, 959, 95486, 77336, 47, 189755, 352, 2263, 400, 7008, 30910, 61170, 15296, 1973, 7693, 35133, 20697, 169581, 5808, 2967, 53418, 166117, 176726, 37382, 80581, 30675, 2306, 117432, 188, 246, 43240, 5885, 9790, ...
[ 0.236083984375, 0.0269317626953125, 0.1119384765625, 0.1942138671875, 0.209228515625, 0.05242919921875, 0.0889892578125, 0.1983642578125, 0.2734375, 0.079345703125, 0.252685546875, 0.06414794921875, 0.1236572265625, 0.0164642333984375, 0.122802734375, 0.1339111328125, 0.113525390625,...
embed
35963083_c0
35963083
lisp
0
Title: Recursively find element position in list using LISP Problem title: Recursively find element position in list using LISP Tags: functional-programming, recursion, lisp Problem: Recursively find element position in list using LISP Here is my problem: Without using MEMBER, complete the following definition of a rec...
Recursively find element position in list using LISP Recursively find element position in list using LISP functional-programming recursion lisp LISP Recursively DEFUN POS COND ENDP EQUAL CAR CDR Find Recursively find element position in list using LISP Here is my problem: Without using MEMBER, complete the following de...
[ -0.01519775390625, 0.026611328125, 0.00836181640625, -0.007476806640625, -0.0023040771484375, 0.023681640625, -0.007293701171875, 0.009765625, 0.01007080078125, -0.0108642578125, 0.017822265625, -0.0155029296875, -0.00439453125, 0.0106201171875, 0.007232666015625, 0.01507568359375, 0...
[ 853, 48650, 5844, 7413, 12830, 19069, 23, 5303, 17368, 16970, 9434, 123309, 28966, 195625, 400, 7008, 202001, 14006, 54602, 14452, 28399, 120572, 42476, 23498, 26040, 2967, 177417, 276, 108582, 28484, 80934, 32354, 339, 241, 91383, 30646, 5117,...
[ 0.044586181640625, 0.1806640625, 0.1168212890625, 0.135009765625, 0.182861328125, 0.2166748046875, 0.05487060546875, 0.181396484375, 0.01318359375, 0.1187744140625, 0.2227783203125, 0.13525390625, 0.08984375, 0.1966552734375, 0.06964111328125, 0.1507568359375, 0.1080322265625, 0.09...
embed
15848855_c0
15848855
lisp
0
Title: Clojure Koan section 8, #5 Problem title: Clojure Koan section 8, #5 Tags: lisp, clojure Problem: Clojure Koan section 8, #5 Why is this valid: (= '(:anything :goes :here) (filter (fn [x] true) '(:anything :goes :here))) but not this? (= (:anything :goes :here) (filter (fn [x] true) '(:anything :goes :here))) or...
Clojure Koan section 8, #5 Clojure Koan section 8, #5 lisp clojure IllegalArgumentException Clojure Koan Don ISeq clojure.lang.Keyword clojure.lang.RT.seqFrom RT.java:505 Clojure Koan section 8, #5 Why is this valid: but not this? or or even Is there a particular reason that the second arg to filter is a quoted list ra...
[ 0.012939453125, 0.046630859375, -0.0078125, -0.00506591796875, -0.004241943359375, 0.007659912109375, 0.00567626953125, 0.0004024505615234375, -0.002166748046875, -0.0074462890625, -0.00531005859375, 0.00579833984375, -0.02197265625, 0.01446533203125, -0.0111083984375, 0.00543212890625...
[ 51053, 461, 107, 1204, 66, 40059, 382, 758, 400, 7008, 20450, 891, 86966, 7614, 1234, 63928, 7650, 864, 3066, 162429, 47416, 20503, 27389, 24071, 23837, 44084, 903, 35604, 1284, 959, 31635, 17932, 79459, 47, 46312, 83, 66747, 71, 5303, 11...
[ 0.07977294921875, 0.11083984375, 0.032989501953125, 0.0560302734375, 0.090087890625, 0.045013427734375, 0.115966796875, 0.1058349609375, 0.0285797119140625, 0.134033203125, 0.073974609375, 0.01690673828125, 0.1429443359375, 0.042510986328125, 0.1771240234375, 0.062744140625, 0.057678...
embed
54018077_c0
54018077
lisp
0
Title: In Common Lisp, when are objects referenced and when are they directly accessed by value? Problem title: In Common Lisp, when are objects referenced and when are they directly accessed by value? Tags: common-lisp, lisp, reference Problem: In Common Lisp, when are objects referenced and when are they directly acc...
In Common Lisp, when are objects referenced and when are they directly accessed by value? In Common Lisp, when are objects referenced and when are they directly accessed by value? common-lisp lisp reference Common Lisp In Common Lisp, when are objects referenced and when are they directly accessed by value? I was readi...
[ 0.0244140625, 0.031982421875, 0.01165771484375, 0.009765625, 0.006378173828125, -0.008544921875, -0.0186767578125, 0.010986328125, -0.004058837890625, -0.011474609375, -0.002593994140625, 0.01611328125, 0.01031494140625, 0.00909423828125, 0.006988525390625, 0.006500244140625, -0.0004...
[ 360, 151301, 1261, 7008, 3229, 36746, 7, 91067, 71, 105237, 17203, 297, 390, 34292, 39210, 4086, 254, 400, 621, 136, 27875, 1272, 239879, 110, 8060, 959, 142424, 160463, 27781, 158, 38750, 831, 32354, 15549, 2258, 22936, 34735, 91407, 313, ...
[ 0.041717529296875, 0.1951904296875, 0.16064453125, 0.181884765625, 0.1461181640625, 0.2359619140625, 0.0171661376953125, 0.26220703125, 0.07366943359375, 0.170654296875, 0.1820068359375, 0.041046142578125, 0.09912109375, 0.2362060546875, 0.115234375, 0.10748291015625, 0.0928955078125...
embed
67846799_c0
67846799
lisp
0
Title: Solving Eight-queens in scheme Problem title: Solving Eight-queens in scheme Tags: scheme, sicp, lisp, n-queens Problem: Solving Eight-queens in scheme I'm starting to write a function to see if a queen is 'safe' from the other positions on the board, the board is in the form of (row col) and 1-indexed. Here is ...
Solving Eight-queens in scheme Solving Eight-queens in scheme scheme sicp lisp n-queens Solving Eight-queens Solving Eight-queens in scheme I'm starting to write a function to see if a queen is 'safe' from the other positions on the board, the board is in the form of (row col) and 1-indexed. Here is what I have thus fa...
[ 0.0006256103515625, 0.029052734375, 0.032470703125, -0.0028228759765625, -0.012451171875, -0.0247802734375, 0.002349853515625, -0.0023651123046875, -0.010498046875, -0.018798828125, 0.01007080078125, 0.023681640625, -0.01318359375, -0.0091552734375, -0.047607421875, 0.004119873046875, ...
[ 6678, 6496, 241, 22553, 944, 1755, 23, 150370, 26536, 254, 400, 7008, 653, 72134, 33022, 32354, 1957, 2174, 41, 33, 83, 115840, 1295, 3789, 19069, 98, 45443, 3173, 15555, 3365, 4317, 4711, 2060, 31577, 11782, 22759, 927, 100, 316, 678, ...
[ 0.12109375, 0.05426025390625, 0.08587646484375, 0.2193603515625, 0.18798828125, 0.1629638671875, 0.03082275390625, 0.2125244140625, 0.0263519287109375, 0.0828857421875, 0.01190185546875, 0.10552978515625, 0.0157318115234375, 0.00714111328125, 0.0933837890625, 0.1431884765625, 0.10040...
embed
75793461_c0
75793461
lisp
0
Title: LISP find item in alist Problem title: LISP find item in alist Tags: lisp, common-lisp Problem: LISP find item in alist I've got a a-list like (setf *books* '( ( (:title 'Titulo 1) (:autor (quote Autor 1) ) ) ( (:title 'Título 2) (:autor (quote Autor 2) ) ) ; (...) )) I need to create a function that find a book...
LISP find item in alist LISP find item in alist lisp common-lisp LISP Titulo Autor string1 string2 length1 end2 LISP find item in alist I've got a a-list like I need to create a function that find a book based on its title. After reading the docs I try: I can't find the book, what am I doing wrong? Note that none of th...
[ 0.005889892578125, 0.0081787109375, -0.009765625, 0.015869140625, -0.0084228515625, -0.0024871826171875, 0.00128936767578125, 0.0128173828125, 0.0037078857421875, -0.0206298828125, 0.0294189453125, 0.0206298828125, -0.0172119140625, -0.00250244140625, 0.014892578125, 0.00592041015625, ...
[ 16970, 9434, 7413, 35735, 23, 10, 6562, 400, 7008, 39210, 4086, 254, 104665, 31, 11328, 79315, 304, 140909, 3564, 9, 1884, 3871, 28282, 32354, 12877, 35509, 98, 6863, 44759, 16454, 54, 4439, 9790, 831, 18, 444, 20594, 44691, 109921, 79786...
[ 0.1318359375, 0.1937255859375, 0.1884765625, 0.165283203125, 0.052276611328125, 0.126220703125, 0.23486328125, 0.099609375, 0.1715087890625, 0.09503173828125, 0.08074951171875, 0.139404296875, 0.151611328125, 0.09075927734375, 0.12371826171875, 0.0870361328125, 0.0125732421875, 0.0...
embed
37379042_c0
37379042
lisp
0
Title: Racket URL Dispatch Rules Problem title: Racket URL Dispatch Rules Tags: racket, lisp, scheme Problem: Racket URL Dispatch Rules I'm following the official racket example for URL-based dispatch, but can't seem to get it to work correctly. #lang web-server/insta (require web-server/servlet web-server/servlet-env)...
Racket URL Dispatch Rules Racket URL Dispatch Rules racket lisp scheme web-server/servlet Racket URL Dispatch Rules Racket URL Dispatch Rules I'm following the official racket example for URL-based dispatch, but can't seem to get it to work correctly. When I run the .rkt file, the web server seems to work correctly. Bu...
[ 0.003326416015625, 0.019775390625, -0.005584716796875, 0.02001953125, -0.0042724609375, -0.009033203125, 0.006622314453125, 0.0146484375, -0.006134033203125, -0.00150299072265625, 0.0074462890625, -0.04443359375, -0.002960205078125, -0.004486083984375, 0.004974365234375, -0.00534057617...
[ 2552, 27853, 31862, 6206, 4453, 206, 139118, 673, 400, 7008, 150370, 1467, 39642, 62016, 1974, 25632, 51521, 27781, 77007, 58580, 257, 4488, 26785, 11675, 7190, 18, 11435, 10723, 37202, 20653, 5962, 5201, 9191, 98908, 40294, 4836, 189534, 145...
[ 0.162841796875, 0.29931640625, 0.2064208984375, 0.0518798828125, 0.1312255859375, 0.079833984375, 0.1536865234375, 0.1361083984375, 0.04205322265625, 0.148193359375, 0.1531982421875, 0.05078125, 0.0928955078125, 0.108642578125, 0.110595703125, 0.057159423828125, 0.069580078125, 0.1...
embed
17526588_c0
17526588
lisp
0
Title: Is it possible to pass function in using keyword argument Problem title: Is it possible to pass function in using keyword argument Tags: ruby, lisp, common-lisp Problem: Is it possible to pass function in using keyword argument Hi I am trying to implement this Common Lisp Macro in Ruby 2.0.0-p247: (defmacro bina...
Is it possible to pass function in using keyword argument Is it possible to pass function in using keyword argument ruby lisp common-lisp keyword test_func binary_cmp Is it possible to pass function in using keyword argument Hi I am trying to implement this Common Lisp Macro in Ruby 2.0.0-p247: A binary test function t...
[ 0.011962890625, 0.000522613525390625, 0.02001953125, -0.01177978515625, 0.01336669921875, -0.003387451171875, -0.0001277923583984375, -0.0113525390625, -0.0062255859375, -0.0019989013671875, -0.018798828125, -0.00677490234375, 0.0032806396484375, 0.014404296875, 0.01123046875, -0.01892...
[ 2071, 442, 7722, 47, 27875, 32354, 23, 17368, 166117, 10750, 21922, 53, 400, 7008, 39210, 4086, 254, 3034, 16498, 2394, 6635, 2676, 31577, 29479, 151301, 1261, 4727, 516, 158189, 787, 99929, 142430, 51776, 116, 106, 114977, 5386, 10402, 237...
[ 0.041717529296875, 0.04864501953125, 0.1845703125, 0.022430419921875, 0.200439453125, 0.24853515625, 0.110107421875, 0.137939453125, 0.262939453125, 0.261962890625, 0.1370849609375, 0.08709716796875, 0.1199951171875, 0.191162109375, 0.104248046875, 0.08355712890625, 0.12451171875, ...
embed
9579242_c0
9579242
lisp
0
Title: How to send lists as function parameters in lisp? Problem title: How to send lists as function parameters in lisp? Tags: parameters, list, lisp Problem: How to send lists as function parameters in lisp? So I have an error: EVAL: undefined function P1 Below is my code so far. (defun andexp (a b) (list 'and a b)) ...
How to send lists as function parameters in lisp? How to send lists as function parameters in lisp? parameters list lisp How EVAL How to send lists as function parameters in lisp? So I have an error: Below is my code so far. Here I am creating an expression: Which evaluates to this: when I run the code below, I get the...
[ -0.004180908203125, 0.03125, 0.0010986328125, 0.0169677734375, -0.0262451171875, 0.02734375, 0.01904296875, 0.00946044921875, -0.000720977783203125, -0.007568359375, 0.0172119140625, -0.01043701171875, 0.0162353515625, 0.001922607421875, -0.000560760498046875, 0.00830078125, 0.012634...
[ 11249, 25379, 5303, 7, 237, 32354, 171859, 23, 400, 7008, 241, 61152, 18499, 17336, 18151, 2060, 105233, 125195, 151575, 11675, 35064, 915, 418, 5608, 70541, 41591, 4488, 3642, 139124, 3934, 44691 ]
[ 0.0633544921875, 0.148681640625, 0.250732421875, 0.06976318359375, 0.10791015625, 0.1859130859375, 0.2274169921875, 0.0266571044921875, 0.1229248046875, 0.2120361328125, 0.0367431640625, 0.2178955078125, 0.1500244140625, 0.0196533203125, 0.0650634765625, 0.039947509765625, 0.01699829...
embed
9950680_c0
9950680
lisp
0
Title: Unix signal handling in (common) lisp Problem title: Unix signal handling in (common) lisp Tags: common-lisp, lisp, ccl, signals, sigint Problem: Unix signal handling in (common) lisp I've done a bit of research on this subject and am turning up blanks. There seem to be implementation-dependent ways of doing Uni...
Unix signal handling in (common) lisp Unix signal handling in (common) lisp common-lisp lisp ccl signals sigint Unix Unix signal handling in (common) lisp I've done a bit of research on this subject and am turning up blanks. There seem to be implementation-dependent ways of doing Unix signal handling in Common Lisp, bu...
[ 0.010986328125, 0.025146484375, 0.006134033203125, 0.00799560546875, -0.0283203125, -0.0177001953125, 0.02294921875, 0.01495361328125, -0.00335693359375, -0.031982421875, -0.01080322265625, 0.0274658203125, -0.012451171875, 0.02734375, 0.00168609619140625, 0.00183868408203125, -0.009...
[ 992, 4084, 26073, 45064, 23, 277, 3796, 400, 7008, 39210, 4086, 254, 34937, 1144, 4288, 25188, 44237, 208124, 181063, 48322, 20594, 151301, 1261, 98169, 41421, 197648, 3917, 1884, 44632, 100, 159, 31343, 59537, 54, 4224, 7844, 8633, 18, 346...
[ 0.1376953125, 0.1588134765625, 0.260498046875, 0.220703125, 0.046875, 0.065673828125, 0.149658203125, 0.146240234375, 0.230712890625, 0.1395263671875, 0.09967041015625, 0.089599609375, 0.1319580078125, 0.1007080078125, 0.1876220703125, 0.0067138671875, 0.121826171875, 0.14575195312...
embed
51379317_c0
51379317
lisp
0
Title: Need explanation on reverse scientific notation function in Lisp Problem title: Need explanation on reverse scientific notation function in Lisp Tags: sicp, scheme, r5rs, lisp, explain Problem: Need explanation on reverse scientific notation function in Lisp Here's the function i have and understand to go from 1...
Need explanation on reverse scientific notation function in Lisp Need explanation on reverse scientific notation function in Lisp sicp scheme r5rs lisp explain Need Lisp r5rs Need explanation on reverse scientific notation function in Lisp Here's the function i have and understand to go from 1) your coefficient and 2) ...
[ -0.01092529296875, 0.04052734375, 0.000553131103515625, 0.033935546875, -0.01300048828125, 0.0167236328125, 0.01116943359375, 0.01806640625, 0.01068115234375, -0.01220703125, 0.003387451171875, 0.021728515625, -0.026611328125, 0.017333984375, 0.01251220703125, 0.000946044921875, -0.0...
[ 52889, 187136, 39531, 184, 57456, 110, 22062, 32354, 1261, 7008, 98, 23, 26536, 254, 150370, 1690, 758, 4295, 400, 73342, 765, 28219, 738, 1295, 552, 24500, 45964, 4958, 1119, 54137, 125663, 14012, 1810, 89536, 237875, 3789, 3917, 10932, 28...
[ 0.1319580078125, 0.1978759765625, 0.1883544921875, 0.1512451171875, 0.1768798828125, 0.166748046875, 0.1051025390625, 0.161865234375, 0.134521484375, 0.2071533203125, 0.01123046875, 0.013519287109375, 0.06103515625, 0.1578369140625, 0.1337890625, 0.0189971923828125, 0.049102783203125...
embed
77628296_c0
77628296
lisp
0
Title: How to add evaluated results to 2d list Problem title: How to add evaluated results to 2d list Tags: lisp, list, slime, vertices, common-lisp Problem: How to add evaluated results to 2d list I'm trying to make a list of 3d coordinates of a sphere vertices, starting with ((0 0 1) ...) like this: (defvar spherelat...
How to add evaluated results to 2d list How to add evaluated results to 2d list lisp list slime vertices common-lisp How How to add evaluated results to 2d list I'm trying to make a list of 3d coordinates of a sphere vertices, starting with ((0 0 1) ...) like this: Trying to add next point this gives result while I nee...
[ 0.0145263671875, 0.0101318359375, -0.0030364990234375, -0.00506591796875, -0.013671875, 0.00023651123046875, 0.03271484375, 0.0286865234375, 0.00445556640625, 0.0128173828125, 0.0179443359375, -0.0004119873046875, -0.00136566162109375, -0.0277099609375, -0.03369140625, 0.0184326171875,...
[ 11249, 47, 15190, 151575, 297, 50339, 116, 71, 5303, 400, 7008, 34264, 13, 95378, 5170, 39210, 4086, 254, 31577, 3249, 138, 176866, 90, 157695, 72134, 678, 2389, 757, 4879, 11737, 6275, 16750, 3871, 880, 136, 9545, 69307, 41206, 214 ]
[ 0.060516357421875, 0.09637451171875, 0.1553955078125, 0.2076416015625, 0.128662109375, 0.20703125, 0.12017822265625, 0.09588623046875, 0.2181396484375, 0.0726318359375, 0.12249755859375, 0.10919189453125, 0.08795166015625, 0.1129150390625, 0.0634765625, 0.070068359375, 0.037841796875...
embed
6827819_c0
6827819
lisp
0
Title: Treating the values from a list of slots and strings Problem title: Treating the values from a list of slots and strings Tags: lisp, common-lisp Problem: Treating the values from a list of slots and strings I want to do a macro in common lisp which is supposed to take in one of its arguments a list made of slots...
Treating the values from a list of slots and strings Treating the values from a list of slots and strings lisp common-lisp a Treating Treating the values from a list of slots and strings I want to do a macro in common lisp which is supposed to take in one of its arguments a list made of slots and strings. Here is the p...
[ -0.0152587890625, -0.0023345947265625, 0.004150390625, 0.00592041015625, -0.01220703125, 0.01220703125, 0.01043701171875, 0.000850677490234375, 0.0113525390625, -0.00848388671875, 0.0021514892578125, -0.00909423828125, -0.000148773193359375, 0.00616455078125, -0.020263671875, -0.000633...
[ 4804, 26518, 142424, 1295, 5303, 121892, 136, 79315, 400, 7008, 39210, 4086, 254, 111, 3444, 111789, 134598, 5646, 10750, 7228, 160469, 6528, 28412, 23180, 35509, 79459, 6562, 61924, 45646, 27781, 11782, 47, 32354, 237, 10001, 144851, 140992, ...
[ 0.19287109375, 0.08978271484375, 0.1824951171875, 0.113037109375, 0.1595458984375, 0.2020263671875, 0.1107177734375, 0.19482421875, 0.107666015625, 0.1787109375, 0.1484375, 0.082275390625, 0.146484375, 0.02044677734375, 0.0482177734375, 0.1806640625, 0.042449951171875, 0.0567321777...
embed
58887691_c0
58887691
lisp
0
Title: Local State in Common Lisp Problem title: Local State in Common Lisp Tags: common-lisp, let, lisp, state Problem: Local State in Common Lisp Newbie question in Common Lisp: How to make my procedure to return distinct procedural object with its own local binding each time call? Currently, I use let to create the ...
Local State in Common Lisp Local State in Common Lisp common-lisp let lisp state Local State Common Lisp Give Expect Local State in Common Lisp Newbie question in Common Lisp: How to make my procedure to return distinct procedural object with its own local binding each time call? Currently, I use let to create the loca...
[ -0.0022125244140625, 0.0205078125, -0.01214599609375, -0.0072021484375, -0.015380859375, 0.037109375, -0.0128173828125, 0.024169921875, 0.01068115234375, -0.034912109375, 0.017578125, 0.01953125, 0.02734375, 0.026611328125, 0.02685546875, -0.007232666015625, -0.009033203125, -0.001...
[ 24172, 22836, 151301, 1261, 7008, 23, 39210, 4086, 254, 2633, 400, 11341, 77878, 60075, 24762, 9014, 9655, 11249, 3249, 759, 50491, 47, 30646, 117781, 59158, 141, 36746, 678, 6863, 10002, 4000, 128239, 12638, 1733, 11782, 4527, 28282, 6626, ...
[ 0.1798095703125, 0.229248046875, 0.1448974609375, 0.1412353515625, 0.1673583984375, 0.046173095703125, 0.11297607421875, 0.06634521484375, 0.126220703125, 0.234130859375, 0.10809326171875, 0.2255859375, 0.07916259765625, 0.1318359375, 0.1531982421875, 0.09613037109375, 0.039855957031...
embed
420300_c0
420300
lisp
0
Title: Lisp: Need help getting correct behaviour from SBCL when converting octet stream to EUC-JP with malformed bytes Problem title: Lisp: Need help getting correct behaviour from SBCL when converting octet stream to EUC-JP with malformed bytes Tags: unicode, sbcl, lisp Problem: Lisp: Need help getting correct behavio...
Lisp: Need help getting correct behaviour from SBCL when converting octet stream to EUC-JP with malformed bytes Lisp: Need help getting correct behaviour from SBCL when converting octet stream to EUC-JP with malformed bytes unicode sbcl lisp SBCL Lisp Need EUC-JP sb-int:character-coding-error sb-ext:octets-to-string KA...
[ 0.014404296875, 0.01495361328125, 0.0224609375, -0.02880859375, 0.00592041015625, 0.006622314453125, 0.009033203125, 0.00054931640625, -0.0113525390625, 0.005615234375, -0.0152587890625, -0.033203125, 0.0152587890625, 0.01171875, -0.00958251953125, -0.023681640625, 0.0150146484375, ...
[ 1261, 7008, 52889, 4358, 26785, 224833, 90944, 37486, 96760, 44043, 3263, 75973, 47, 3747, 441, 9, 122063, 960, 5037, 390, 1295, 60347, 275, 34937, 400, 91, 4288, 9254, 2263, 587, 6238, 188800, 3355, 6652, 188, 91693, 91877, 67143, 284, 8...
[ 0.119384765625, 0.1925048828125, 0.061187744140625, 0.09588623046875, 0.11962890625, 0.1539306640625, 0.12109375, 0.186279296875, 0.12060546875, 0.106201171875, 0.1435546875, 0.1427001953125, 0.046905517578125, 0.1488037109375, 0.12548828125, 0.040496826171875, 0.1998291015625, 0.1...
embed
506167_c0
506167
lisp
0
Title: Building a Texas Hold'em playing AI..from scratch Problem title: Building a Texas Hold'em playing AI..from scratch Tags: poker, lisp, java, jatha, artificial-intelligence Problem: Building a Texas Hold'em playing AI..from scratch I'm interested in building a Texas Hold 'Em AI engine in Java. This is a ...
Building a Texas Hold'em playing AI..from scratch Building a Texas Hold'em playing AI..from scratch poker lisp java jatha artificial-intelligence scratch Building Texas Hold AI..from Building a Texas Hold'em playing AI..from scratch I'm interested in building a Texas Hold 'Em AI engine in Java. This is a long...
[ -0.017822265625, 0.0076904296875, 0.0125732421875, 0.00384521484375, -0.004150390625, 0.0206298828125, 0.0194091796875, -0.005035400390625, 0.0096435546875, -0.04296875, 0.03125, 0.0125732421875, -0.0137939453125, 0.004638671875, 0.00738525390625, -0.0166015625, 0.01141357421875, 0...
[ 104919, 10, 31464, 41656, 3768, 195, 75169, 38730, 161063, 206597, 25600, 400, 7008, 79, 330, 3238, 66733, 130687, 25, 60892, 33976, 242, 34139, 87907, 23, 41925, 13579, 13452, 1774, 14145, 19713, 6626, 5369, 7464, 99, 40466, 38246, 45367, ...
[ 0.1787109375, 0.0323486328125, 0.2080078125, 0.2093505859375, 0.076171875, 0.1544189453125, 0.1431884765625, 0.264892578125, 0.107177734375, 0.1829833984375, 0.1663818359375, 0.07525634765625, 0.1375732421875, 0.082275390625, 0.09765625, 0.1934814453125, 0.0780029296875, 0.08905029...
embed
36335040_c0
36335040
lisp
0
Title: Replacing the first occurence of an element in a list Problem title: Replacing the first occurence of an element in a list Tags: functional-programming, lisp, list, scheme, sisc Problem: Replacing the first occurence of an element in a list I am writing a function replaceFirst(X Y L) which replaces only the firs...
Replacing the first occurence of an element in a list Replacing the first occurence of an element in a list functional-programming lisp list scheme sisc Replacing Wrong Replacing the first occurence of an element in a list I am writing a function replaceFirst(X Y L) which replaces only the first occurrence of X with Y ...
[ -0.00087738037109375, 0.0252685546875, 0.00457763671875, -0.00811767578125, 0.000919342041015625, -0.000896453857421875, -0.0155029296875, -0.00933837890625, -0.00008630752563476562, -0.0118408203125, 0.018310546875, 0.0174560546875, -0.01904296875, -0.03662109375, 0.0167236328125, 0.0...
[ 853, 133266, 5117, 74918, 6620, 12830, 23, 5303, 123309, 28966, 400, 7008, 150370, 78, 10382, 601, 35133, 32562, 32354, 91995, 207263, 1542, 990, 339, 4734, 42, 1193, 678, 18499, 360, 50491, 88685, 10644, 10750, 19069, 13806, 232578, 2258, ...
[ 0.10211181640625, 0.1790771484375, 0.1695556640625, 0.1845703125, 0.09429931640625, 0.1790771484375, 0.01324462890625, 0.198486328125, 0.094970703125, 0.0904541015625, 0.038330078125, 0.1177978515625, 0.080810546875, 0.0450439453125, 0.1011962890625, 0.0162200927734375, 0.15478515625...
embed
6116793_c0
6116793
lisp
0
Title: adjacency matrix/Floyd/Warshall in lisp Problem title: adjacency matrix/Floyd/Warshall in lisp Tags: matrix, lisp, graph, floyd-warshall, clisp Problem: adjacency matrix/Floyd/Warshall in lisp Apparently my teacher believes that even if we don't have time to learn stuff (nor enough examples) we should move on, s...
adjacency matrix/Floyd/Warshall in lisp adjacency matrix/Floyd/Warshall in lisp matrix lisp graph floyd-warshall clisp Floyd Warshall adjacency matrix/Floyd/Warshall in lisp Apparently my teacher believes that even if we don't have time to learn stuff (nor enough examples) we should move on, so I now need to know how t...
[ -0.004669189453125, 0.01470947265625, -0.0198974609375, 0.0184326171875, -0.031005859375, -0.0034027099609375, -0.027099609375, 0.008056640625, -0.00341796875, 0.00396728515625, -0.010986328125, -0.00616455078125, -0.0262451171875, 0.00038909912109375, -0.0220947265625, -0.021728515625...
[ 123594, 329, 27771, 50944, 425, 64, 919, 365, 11073, 71947, 7, 29907, 23, 400, 7008, 41382, 21917, 4205, 95701, 205382, 34210, 117914, 18822, 1733, 30698, 41884, 27781, 5608, 25813, 98, 3642, 3249, 9, 136, 234873, 502, 4867, 2967, 139392, ...
[ 0.1866455078125, 0.1702880859375, 0.13623046875, 0.1846923828125, 0.08349609375, 0.0718994140625, 0.01116943359375, 0.053985595703125, 0.130615234375, 0.1326904296875, 0.033935546875, 0.236083984375, 0.07073974609375, 0.1015625, 0.2030029296875, 0.22802734375, 0.06658935546875, 0.0...
embed
79312073_c0
79312073
lisp
0
Title: Inconsistent results in SBCL Problem title: Inconsistent results in SBCL Tags: lisp, common-lisp, sbcl Problem: Inconsistent results in SBCL Consider the following Common Lisp code. (print (let* ((x nil) (y x)) (setq x t) (and y x))) ; T (print (let* ((x nil) (y x)) (setq x t) (and x y))) ; NIL (print (let* ((x ...
Inconsistent results in SBCL Inconsistent results in SBCL lisp common-lisp sbcl Inconsistent SBCL NIL Inconsistent results in SBCL Consider the following Common Lisp code. Running the above code in SBCL 2.4.9 in linux, the first line prints T while the remaining lines print NIL . This online SBCL interpreter shows the ...
[ 0.01214599609375, 0.00970458984375, 0.0101318359375, 0.0169677734375, -0.0020904541015625, -0.00090789794921875, 0.0230712890625, 0.01300048828125, -0.0047607421875, 0.0087890625, -0.01708984375, 0.0296630859375, 0.01239013671875, 0.00182342529296875, 0.0302734375, 0.005645751953125, ...
[ 360, 25553, 6892, 50339, 90944, 37486, 23, 400, 7008, 39210, 4086, 254, 91, 275, 34937, 541, 16444, 25632, 151301, 1261, 18151, 28398, 36917, 787, 156982, 11508, 6077, 5117, 13315, 28412, 384, 12960, 47143, 124519, 1118, 29481, 56, 5701, 95...
[ 0.0888671875, 0.17236328125, 0.23193359375, 0.2109375, 0.163818359375, 0.231689453125, 0.01251220703125, 0.089599609375, 0.193359375, 0.1346435546875, 0.0960693359375, 0.1546630859375, 0.01776123046875, 0.06817626953125, 0.16650390625, 0.13037109375, 0.2078857421875, 0.028472900390...
embed
5158155_c0
5158155
lisp
0
Title: How are clojure/lisp programs modeled as a diagram? Problem title: How are clojure/lisp programs modeled as a diagram? Tags: diagram, lisp, clojure Problem: How are clojure/lisp programs modeled as a diagram? I've tried wedging my clojure diagrams into what's available in UML, using class-blocks as the file-leve...
How are clojure/lisp programs modeled as a diagram? How are clojure/lisp programs modeled as a diagram? diagram lisp clojure How How are clojure/lisp programs modeled as a diagram? I've tried wedging my clojure diagrams into what's available in UML, using class-blocks as the file-level namespaces and dependency links t...
[ -0.00830078125, 0.0184326171875, -0.015869140625, -0.001251220703125, -0.0216064453125, 0.017822265625, 0.003143310546875, -0.00897216796875, -0.0004329681396484375, -0.01116943359375, -0.0005645751953125, -0.00897216796875, -0.0262451171875, 0.00151824951171875, 0.00555419921875, -0.0...
[ 11249, 20450, 461, 107, 4086, 254, 103391, 3299, 297, 237, 10, 117233, 400, 7008, 621, 64, 37842, 24243, 9966, 19882, 345, 39456, 18507, 81409, 11435, 67919, 210716, 42548, 22317, 7639, 151618, 434, 92, 17660, 20947, 123309, 103510, 497, 51...
[ 0.0814208984375, 0.141845703125, 0.1644287109375, 0.1612548828125, 0.114990234375, 0.167236328125, 0.2060546875, 0.2064208984375, 0.079345703125, 0.1044921875, 0.042236328125, 0.243896484375, 0.0931396484375, 0.1597900390625, 0.013702392578125, 0.0147857666015625, 0.0251312255859375,...
embed
58116376_c0
58116376
lisp
0
Title: How to access the value of a variable inside a list? Problem title: How to access the value of a variable inside a list? Tags: lisp, elisp, variables Problem: How to access the value of a variable inside a list? I'm a newbie in ELisp and I can't set a variable value to access later. I read the documentation on a...
How to access the value of a variable inside a list? How to access the value of a variable inside a list? lisp elisp variables How Wrong Some How to access the value of a variable inside a list? I'm a newbie in ELisp and I can't set a variable value to access later. I read the documentation on accessing variable values...
[ 0.000385284423828125, -0.017578125, -0.004608154296875, 0.000453948974609375, -0.006866455078125, 0.025146484375, -0.005462646484375, 0.00714111328125, -0.002105712890625, -0.002960205078125, 0.00689697265625, 0.0218505859375, 0.00159454345703125, -0.01007080078125, -0.000904083251953125...
[ 11249, 47, 17203, 70, 34292, 111, 77336, 46132, 5303, 10, 400, 7008, 15296, 601, 35133, 31384, 9014, 9780, 164, 254, 831, 5423, 14432, 209806, 142424, 10644, 10750, 21441, 748, 91693, 140992, 206, 85269, 4439, 373, 18234, 127877, 18151, 183...
[ 0.0699462890625, 0.05377197265625, 0.2261962890625, 0.037841796875, 0.229736328125, 0.0584716796875, 0.2880859375, 0.195068359375, 0.2222900390625, 0.00616455078125, 0.0894775390625, 0.18310546875, 0.0809326171875, 0.0151214599609375, 0.140625, 0.0343017578125, 0.0748291015625, 0.0...
embed
18599665_c0
18599665
lisp
0
Title: Race condition between nested applications of (define ...)? Problem title: Race condition between nested applications of (define ...)? Tags: scheme, racket, race-condition, lisp Problem: Race condition between nested applications of (define ...)? Using DrRacket, on both linux and Mac OS, the following code gives...
Race condition between nested applications of (define ...)? Race condition between nested applications of (define ...)? scheme racket race-condition lisp Race r5rs Race condition between nested applications of (define ...)? Using DrRacket, on both linux and Mac OS, the following code gives this error but if I uncomment...
[ -0.0098876953125, 0.00897216796875, -0.00177764892578125, 0.020263671875, -0.000667572021484375, 0.0025177001953125, 0.003753662109375, 0.00144195556640625, 0.00191497802734375, -0.0155029296875, 0.00775146484375, -0.0245361328125, -0.014892578125, 0.00775146484375, 0.0238037109375, 0....
[ 94698, 35431, 17721, 8512, 71, 86685, 112, 64552, 153, 150370, 673, 27853, 45712, 126940, 400, 7008, 758, 4295, 1773, 12248, 11508, 6077, 4727, 11787, 25632, 18151, 76199, 903, 18499, 2174, 51, 277, 674, 54936, 2256, 86595, 50491, 80934, 43...
[ 0.236572265625, 0.2432861328125, 0.1571044921875, 0.2142333984375, 0.114501953125, 0.1839599609375, 0.076904296875, 0.2027587890625, 0.04168701171875, 0.1378173828125, 0.0877685546875, 0.2059326171875, 0.2000732421875, 0.2225341796875, 0.03472900390625, 0.1207275390625, 0.03375244140...
embed
40519825_c0
40519825
lisp
0
Title: Insert Node into a Tree - Racket Problem title: Insert Node into a Tree - Racket Tags: functional-programming, lisp, racket, typed-racket Problem: Insert Node into a Tree - Racket I am trying to add a new node to the tree. The following are my definitions and function type: (define-struct (Some T) ([value : T]))...
Insert Node into a Tree - Racket Insert Node into a Tree - Racket functional-programming lisp racket typed-racket Insert Node Tree Racket Some Option None BST Integer Insert Node into a Tree - Racket I am trying to add a new node to the tree. The following are my definitions and function type: Insert is the insert that...
[ -0.0125732421875, -0.001953125, 0.01275634765625, -0.004241943359375, 0.0047607421875, 0.0179443359375, -0.020751953125, -0.059326171875, -0.0205078125, -0.005859375, 0.00860595703125, -0.045654296875, 0.00015544891357421875, -0.01385498046875, 0.01220703125, 0.007537841796875, 0.019...
[ 360, 33657, 438, 112, 3934, 101344, 2552, 27853, 10, 123309, 28966, 400, 7008, 673, 10644, 219, 86769, 8545, 44401, 31577, 15190, 3525, 110, 47, 53201, 25632, 80934, 32354, 83, 183540, 75101, 8337, 5608, 1492, 52080, 41371, 5368, 9520, 6528...
[ 0.13818359375, 0.26220703125, 0.1766357421875, 0.185302734375, 0.1766357421875, 0.2366943359375, 0.0958251953125, 0.172119140625, 0.008056640625, 0.1170654296875, 0.10137939453125, 0.034881591796875, 0.1148681640625, 0.0694580078125, 0.142822265625, 0.04241943359375, 0.06756591796875...
embed
23942389_c0
23942389
lisp
0
Title: Why people say "emacs is good for writing lisp program because it's written in emacs lisp"? Problem title: Why people say "emacs is good for writing lisp program because it's written in emacs lisp"? Tags: lisp, emacs Problem: Why people say "emacs is good for writing lisp program be...
Why people say "emacs is good for writing lisp program because it's written in emacs lisp"? Why people say "emacs is good for writing lisp program because it's written in emacs lisp"? lisp emacs Why Why people say "emacs is good for writing lisp program because it's written in emacs lisp"?...
[ 0.0024566650390625, 0.01324462890625, -0.017333984375, 0.00115203857421875, -0.0103759765625, 0.0162353515625, -0.006195068359375, 0.00872802734375, 0.0189208984375, -0.0034027099609375, 0.016845703125, 0.007171630859375, -0.0263671875, 0.0155029296875, 0.0084228515625, -0.001159667968...
[ 44084, 3395, 5154, 11883, 4439, 83, 4127, 100, 32562, 400, 7008, 1528, 6637, 3768, 59121, 352, 2263, 7, 23, 28987, 36497, 1884, 28, 106371, 184, 79, 330, 55516, 136, 46876, 107137, 78779, 103391, 10422, 756, 220734, 6083, 48723, 39987, 45...
[ 0.0826416015625, 0.0982666015625, 0.064697265625, 0.186279296875, 0.1934814453125, 0.06182861328125, 0.1553955078125, 0.111328125, 0.160888671875, 0.1700439453125, 0.18994140625, 0.1513671875, 0.031982421875, 0.05389404296875, 0.12255859375, 0.1170654296875, 0.17236328125, 0.138793...
embed
33552608_c0
33552608
lisp
0
Title: Currying for functions with n (3 or more) arguments? Problem title: Currying for functions with n (3 or more) arguments? Tags: haskell, lisp, currying Problem: Currying for functions with n (3 or more) arguments? For functions with three or more arguments, how does currying work? I searched over SO and Google. C...
Currying for functions with n (3 or more) arguments? Currying for functions with n (3 or more) arguments? haskell lisp currying Currying Currying for functions with n (3 or more) arguments? For functions with three or more arguments, how does currying work? I searched over SO and Google. Concrete examples given in e.g....
[ 0.00616455078125, -0.003326416015625, 0.0257568359375, -0.01177978515625, 0.003021240234375, 0.00579833984375, 0.00213623046875, -0.029296875, 0.0296630859375, 0.00408935546875, 0.020751953125, -0.038330078125, 0.0084228515625, -0.01348876953125, -0.019287109375, -0.00860595703125, 0...
[ 17065, 1294, 214, 100, 32354, 678, 653, 6896, 707, 1286, 10750, 7, 1556, 142508, 400, 7008, 198555, 1326, 17262, 3642, 14602, 4488, 33938, 15969, 1815, 225111, 27781, 83, 33177, 56216, 7168, 1672, 2394, 6635, 1238, 425, 113, 706, 51776, 1...
[ 0.202880859375, 0.20947265625, 0.195556640625, 0.0704345703125, 0.2291259765625, 0.0673828125, 0.0958251953125, 0.180908203125, 0.045318603515625, 0.1151123046875, 0.2376708984375, 0.033721923828125, 0.1134033203125, 0.2183837890625, 0.0924072265625, 0.1444091796875, 0.287353515625, ...
embed
4833953_c1
4833953
lisp
1
that when iterating you can still call it and receive the old cached value if passed ":pause t", in hopes of making the permutation slightly cleaner. Also, while the example above is a simple list of two identical closures, the list can be an arbitrarily-complicated tree (which can be permuted in depth-first order, an...
that when iterating you can still call it and receive the old cached value if passed ":pause t", in hopes of making the permutation slightly cleaner. Also, while the example above is a simple list of two identical closures, the list can be an arbitrarily-complicated tree (which can be permuted in depth-first order, an...
[ 0.00494384765625, 0.0238037109375, 0.00909423828125, -0.004302978515625, 0.00494384765625, 0.01495361328125, -0.001708984375, -0.023193359375, 0.00494384765625, -0.061279296875, -0.0177001953125, 0.02099609375, 0.01422119140625, 0.0211181640625, 0.01373291015625, -0.00531005859375, -...
[ 450, 17, 67, 98767, 831, 7464, 11782, 53299, 10332, 82365, 71, 34292, 115081, 149302, 808, 15673, 117, 561, 22062, 161549, 46622, 27781, 8781, 5303, 6626, 31943, 6827, 170224, 61799, 52721, 53201, 168867, 12989, 5423, 115700, 29479, 29806, 51...
[ 0.084716796875, 0.06402587890625, 0.1767578125, 0.14794921875, 0.038482666015625, 0.0877685546875, 0.1300048828125, 0.0718994140625, 0.0760498046875, 0.19580078125, 0.0908203125, 0.1324462890625, 0.1051025390625, 0.1959228515625, 0.102783203125, 0.0193939208984375, 0.06060791015625, ...
embed
54782971_c0
54782971
lisp
0
Title: Using &rest parameters in Common Lisp Problem title: Using &rest parameters in Common Lisp Tags: common-lisp, lisp Problem: Using &rest parameters in Common Lisp I am having some trouble using &rest parameters in a lisp program (with Common Lisp). My knowledge of the syntax not being perfect, I may be do...
Using &rest parameters in Common Lisp Using &rest parameters in Common Lisp common-lisp lisp Using Common Lisp Using &rest parameters in Common Lisp I am having some trouble using &rest parameters in a lisp program (with Common Lisp). My knowledge of the syntax not being perfect, I may be doing something wrong....
[ 0.007476806640625, 0.0181884765625, -0.00061798095703125, 0.01068115234375, -0.00130462646484375, 0.0181884765625, -0.00830078125, -0.004669189453125, 0.011474609375, -0.02734375, 0.02978515625, -0.00238037109375, -0.012939453125, 0.007293701171875, 0.00148773193359375, -0.007171630859...
[ 345, 619, 25133, 56644, 171859, 7, 151301, 1261, 7008, 39210, 4086, 254, 400, 63134, 17368, 1528, 51359, 6002, 86531, 15787, 44691, 6626, 32354, 20697, 46132, 7477, 3630, 11782, 47, 55547, 44136, 2367, 3444, 34735, 14135, 155255, 18499, 26008...
[ 0.090087890625, 0.09820556640625, 0.069580078125, 0.259033203125, 0.254638671875, 0.01385498046875, 0.1632080078125, 0.1689453125, 0.1822509765625, 0.092041015625, 0.0927734375, 0.1119384765625, 0.1121826171875, 0.078857421875, 0.078125, 0.1246337890625, 0.01226806640625, 0.0525207...
embed
58512710_c0
58512710
lisp
0
Title: LISP Write a function called cut-in-half that receives a list and create a new list whose elements are the first half and the second Problem title: LISP Write a function called cut-in-half that receives a list and create a new list whose elements are the first half and the second Tags: lisp, function, common-lis...
LISP Write a function called cut-in-half that receives a list and create a new list whose elements are the first half and the second LISP Write a function called cut-in-half that receives a list and create a new list whose elements are the first half and the second lisp function common-lisp LISP Write LISP Write a func...
[ -0.0012359619140625, 0.00933837890625, 0.0220947265625, 0.016357421875, -0.004364013671875, 0.0277099609375, -0.0035858154296875, 0.002685546875, 0.0034942626953125, -0.0027313232421875, -0.005401611328125, -0.00848388671875, 0.00482177734375, -0.005828857421875, 0.0023956298828125, 0....
[ 16970, 9434, 601, 18781, 32354, 59226, 73, 4200, 420, 53299, 5303, 28282, 3525, 80854, 5117, 23552, 17932, 400, 7008, 39210, 4086, 254, 19441, 63134, 37170, 1456, 51776, 136, 892, 1505, 653, 30646, 237, 7225, 40715, 3501, 106, 541, 16444, ...
[ 0.12939453125, 0.185546875, 0.0902099609375, 0.1455078125, 0.2021484375, 0.174072265625, 0.1273193359375, 0.131591796875, 0.10076904296875, 0.093994140625, 0.1776123046875, 0.1031494140625, 0.0653076171875, 0.1312255859375, 0.05230712890625, 0.141357421875, 0.10986328125, 0.1214599...
embed
57155413_c1
57155413
lisp
1
((1 2 3) (1 2) (1 3) (1) (2 3) (2) (3) ()) So, as I said, this code works. I understand each of the parts of the code individually and, for the most part, how they work with each other. The nested recursive call is what is giving me the trouble. I just don't completely understand it well enough to write such code on m...
((1 2 3) (1 2) (1 3) (1) (2 3) (2) (3) ()) So, as I said, this code works. I understand each of the parts of the code individually and, for the most part, how they work with each other. The nested recursive call is what is giving me the trouble. I just don't completely understand it well enough to write such code on m...
[ -0.00738525390625, 0.0263671875, -0.0263671875, 0.017578125, -0.0108642578125, 0.0286865234375, 0.003753662109375, 0.000335693359375, 0.0164794921875, -0.0111083984375, -0.00518798828125, -0.01470947265625, 0.0002899169921875, 0.0220947265625, 0.0048828125, -0.00836181640625, 0.01171...
[ 15, 41600, 116, 8439, 2858, 4958, 798, 4700, 1737, 2788, 16, 87, 2804, 903, 18151, 43240, 28219, 12638, 63920, 11651, 4488, 678, 3789, 8512, 71, 195625, 5844, 11782, 2367, 83, 68772, 163, 70, 63134, 18, 64557, 33022, 6044, 10002, 4358, ...
[ 0.04876708984375, 0.101318359375, 0.098388671875, 0.16455078125, 0.08917236328125, 0.1282958984375, 0.083984375, 0.07373046875, 0.07122802734375, 0.120361328125, 0.00823974609375, 0.003265380859375, 0.0352783203125, 0.12060546875, 0.236572265625, 0.1915283203125, 0.16650390625, 0.0...
embed
20258658_c0
20258658
lisp
0
Title: Find nodes with css-selectors:query Problem title: Find nodes with css-selectors:query Tags: common-lisp, css, html, lisp Problem: Find nodes with css-selectors:query I'm having trouble getting css-selectors:query to work. Totally didn't understand what args go in and in what order. http://quickdocs.org/css-sele...
Find nodes with css-selectors:query Find nodes with css-selectors:query common-lisp css html lisp Find css-selectors:query Given Get STP DOM chtml:parse drakma:http-request cxml-stp:make-builder lisp.org Doesn Worth Find nodes with css-selectors:query I'm having trouble getting css-selectors:query to work. Totally didn...
[ 0.001068115234375, 0.021728515625, 0.01458740234375, -0.002410888671875, 0, -0.0035552978515625, -0.003326416015625, -0.0054931640625, 0.00341796875, -0.056640625, -0.01214599609375, -0.024169921875, -0.02685546875, -0.0029144287109375, -0.0020904541015625, 0.0005950927734375, -0.008...
[ 26040, 110, 988, 678, 20763, 7, 184, 187075, 12, 944, 1294, 39210, 4086, 254, 7693, 400, 7008, 77878, 23658, 69285, 2500, 3366, 192, 5475, 75616, 131492, 271, 55898, 177149, 56, 1478, 55961, 63134, 4488, 28219, 79459, 23, 12989, 29713, 44...
[ 0.140625, 0.1480712890625, 0.141357421875, 0.128173828125, 0.140625, 0.093505859375, 0.10455322265625, 0.24853515625, 0.02044677734375, 0.151611328125, 0.15380859375, 0.0802001953125, 0.081298828125, 0.2349853515625, 0.0885009765625, 0.0843505859375, 0.15283203125, 0.01333618164062...
embed
3417831_c0
3417831
lisp
0
Title: If Lisp is the perfect language, why are there so many? Problem title: If Lisp is the perfect language, why are there so many? Tags: lisp, comparison Problem: If Lisp is the perfect language, why are there so many? Possible Duplicate: Why is the Lisp community so fragmented? Despite the snarky tone, I'm actually...
If Lisp is the perfect language, why are there so many? If Lisp is the perfect language, why are there so many? lisp comparison Lisp If Lisp is the perfect language, why are there so many? Despite the snarky tone, I'm actually looking for a serious answer. I know the textbook response: Lisp is a model for computation, ...
[ 0.0031890869140625, 0.0223388671875, -0.00457763671875, 0.00250244140625, -0.00897216796875, 0.00150299072265625, 0.00007152557373046875, -0.0022125244140625, 0.0111083984375, -0.0093994140625, -0.009521484375, -0.00457763671875, 0.0106201171875, 0.00567626953125, 0.0002765655517578125, ...
[ 4263, 1261, 7008, 83, 15787, 46876, 15400, 621, 2685, 221, 5941, 400, 225490, 70, 142815, 70334, 20653, 16487, 100, 85583, 35166, 7986, 14137, 57553, 10, 3299, 181135, 1363, 959, 196651, 66161, 12921, 220734, 7, 111, 71579, 86531, 106157, 1...
[ 0.047271728515625, 0.1973876953125, 0.240234375, 0.059844970703125, 0.1986083984375, 0.2210693359375, 0.1690673828125, 0.1046142578125, 0.1268310546875, 0.117919921875, 0.1793212890625, 0.1549072265625, 0.17529296875, 0.0262603759765625, 0.011322021484375, 0.000335693359375, 0.016784...
embed
4625645_c0
4625645
lisp
0
Title: Problem with list in Lisp Problem title: Problem with list in Lisp Tags: list, lisp, functional-programming, scheme Problem: Problem with list in Lisp I am trying to write a simple procedure in Lisp to insert an element into binary search tree. I represented the tree as a list: the first element in the tree is t...
Problem with list in Lisp Problem with list in Lisp list lisp functional-programming scheme Problem Lisp Insert Problem with list in Lisp I am trying to write a simple procedure in Lisp to insert an element into binary search tree. I represented the tree as a list: the first element in the tree is the root the second e...
[ 0.0016326904296875, 0.0218505859375, 0.0087890625, 0.00640869140625, -0.00445556640625, 0.0208740234375, -0.0281982421875, -0.00897216796875, -0.01214599609375, -0.0211181640625, 0.0047607421875, -0.01495361328125, -0.00848388671875, -0.01019287109375, 0.00726318359375, 0.008056640625,...
[ 15649, 678, 5303, 23, 1261, 7008, 400, 123309, 28966, 150370, 360, 33657, 31577, 33022, 8781, 50491, 183540, 12830, 2394, 6635, 33938, 53201, 33636, 5117, 74855, 17932, 25737, 1614, 62600, 50960, 7108, 18151, 11782, 4153, 116, 105801, 54753, ...
[ 0.2091064453125, 0.09686279296875, 0.2353515625, 0.08062744140625, 0.1865234375, 0.249755859375, 0.115478515625, 0.09796142578125, 0.07958984375, 0.1041259765625, 0.0660400390625, 0.194091796875, 0.000457763671875, 0.036376953125, 0.06134033203125, 0.1583251953125, 0.1947021484375, ...
embed
44740882_c0
44740882
lisp
0
Title: Why was the software for Apollo missions written in assembly and not in a high level programming language? Problem title: Why was the software for Apollo missions written in assembly and not in a high level programming language? Tags: programming-languages, lisp, assembly Problem: Why was the software for Apollo...
Why was the software for Apollo missions written in assembly and not in a high level programming language? Why was the software for Apollo missions written in assembly and not in a high level programming language? programming-languages lisp assembly Why Apollo Why was the software for Apollo missions written in assembl...
[ -0.0106201171875, 0.01519775390625, 0.004058837890625, 0.015380859375, -0.01116943359375, -0.000591278076171875, -0.004669189453125, 0.005340576171875, -0.00811767578125, 0.0184326171875, 0.01165771484375, -0.0245361328125, 0.004547119140625, -0.0067138671875, -0.002838134765625, -0.00...
[ 44084, 10975, 100, 107184, 54916, 59121, 23, 10, 89845, 38526, 959, 11192, 17366, 56037, 449, 46876, 509, 136, 196651, 400, 7008, 70, 47, 7, 903, 6, 11814, 534, 29752, 450, 3551, 297, 5117, 332, 98, 55583, 4, 7413, 129517, 214, 13452, ...
[ 0.10064697265625, 0.294189453125, 0.048980712890625, 0.271728515625, 0.184326171875, 0.1898193359375, 0.1080322265625, 0.030059814453125, 0.2193603515625, 0.1119384765625, 0.0880126953125, 0.0992431640625, 0.1624755859375, 0.178466796875, 0.07452392578125, 0.216796875, 0.047576904296...
embed
9388893_c0
9388893
lisp
0
Title: Details about APPLICATION-FINDER-FN in sw-http Problem title: Details about APPLICATION-FINDER-FN in sw-http Tags: comet, lisp, common-lisp Problem: Details about APPLICATION-FINDER-FN in sw-http I'm looking to do some synchronous web-programming in Common Lisp, and I'm rounding up options. One of them is sw-htt...
Details about APPLICATION-FINDER-FN in sw-http Details about APPLICATION-FINDER-FN in sw-http comet lisp common-lisp Details APPLICATION-FINDER-FN Hello Details about APPLICATION-FINDER-FN in sw-http I'm looking to do some synchronous web-programming in Common Lisp, and I'm rounding up options. One of them is sw-http ,...
[ 0.0027313232421875, 0.0198974609375, 0.00927734375, 0.00799560546875, -0.022705078125, -0.010498046875, 0.01611328125, -0.0128173828125, -0.00494384765625, -0.0308837890625, 0.016845703125, -0.0380859375, -0.01519775390625, -0.006072998046875, 0.003265380859375, -0.00579833984375, 0....
[ 77658, 66440, 156354, 35213, 129525, 18044, 919, 839, 91, 434, 9, 5475, 1380, 18, 400, 7008, 39210, 4086, 254, 16487, 200470, 1467, 28966, 214, 151301, 1261, 136, 68807, 50717, 18544, 23658, 10723, 308, 3632, 100, 61179, 72850, 64, 10770, ...
[ 0.052032470703125, 0.1578369140625, 0.2052001953125, 0.08984375, 0.2320556640625, 0.2000732421875, 0.1336669921875, 0.1806640625, 0.092529296875, 0.200927734375, 0.0244903564453125, 0.2509765625, 0.123291015625, 0.0826416015625, 0.079833984375, 0.1690673828125, 0.1014404296875, 0.0...
embed
11004075_c0
11004075
lisp
0
Title: LISP- Improve recursion to tail recursion in rotate list function Problem title: LISP- Improve recursion to tail recursion in rotate list function Tags: functional-programming, lisp, recursion, rotation, tail-recursion Problem: LISP- Improve recursion to tail recursion in rotate list function I have a recursive ...
LISP- Improve recursion to tail recursion in rotate list function LISP- Improve recursion to tail recursion in rotate list function functional-programming lisp recursion rotation tail-recursion LISP Improve LISP- Improve recursion to tail recursion in rotate list function I have a recursive function in LISP to rotate l...
[ -0.005889892578125, 0.014404296875, 0.0252685546875, -0.00732421875, -0.01019287109375, 0.0020751953125, -0.01397705078125, -0.004669189453125, 0.0008697509765625, -0.0072021484375, 0.01397705078125, -0.00836181640625, -0.0002956390380859375, -0.01483154296875, 0.0123291015625, 0.01373...
[ 16970, 9434, 3370, 66187, 195625, 1830, 47, 46741, 47014, 67, 5303, 32354, 23, 123309, 28966, 400, 7008, 2062, 107, 48650, 5844, 7108, 707, 25737, 25632, 91306, 70, 14012, 83, 24491, 9, 25944, 4, 2174, 442, 7, 40907, 2685, 3917, 2046, 5...
[ 0.13525390625, 0.2242431640625, 0.0682373046875, 0.15625, 0.2442626953125, 0.1561279296875, 0.14990234375, 0.289306640625, 0.201416015625, 0.1126708984375, 0.20556640625, 0.208740234375, 0.00213623046875, 0.1326904296875, 0.08154296875, 0.080078125, 0.154052734375, 0.09619140625, ...
embed
74637434_c0
74637434
lisp
0
Title: Error when trying to set variable on LISP in a BMI problem Problem title: Error when trying to set variable on LISP in a BMI problem Tags: common-lisp, lisp Problem: Error when trying to set variable on LISP in a BMI problem It's a simple college problem. I have to get the result using the BMI calc My code below...
Error when trying to set variable on LISP in a BMI problem Error when trying to set variable on LISP in a BMI problem common-lisp lisp Error LISP BMI CALC Weight Height Under Normal Overweight Obesity SETQ:variable Error when trying to set variable on LISP in a BMI problem It's a simple college problem. I have to get t...
[ 0.00384521484375, 0.015625, -0.004425048828125, 0.01165771484375, 0.006378173828125, 0.01171875, 0.0020294189453125, -0.0130615234375, 0.004852294921875, 0.0113525390625, -0.001922607421875, -0.0021514892578125, 0.00185394287109375, -0.024658203125, 0.01123046875, 0.017333984375, 0.0...
[ 212059, 31577, 5423, 77336, 98, 16970, 9434, 335, 10101, 2967, 39210, 4086, 254, 400, 7008, 123616, 441, 150533, 1529, 22553, 9626, 28723, 9578, 165598, 3545, 90, 2481, 128565, 2737, 21690, 2886, 3229, 23, 8781, 40466, 2046, 16750, 6510, 23...
[ 0.1820068359375, 0.12353515625, 0.1488037109375, 0.2724609375, 0.0775146484375, 0.129638671875, 0.236328125, 0.052215576171875, 0.1898193359375, 0.1697998046875, 0.0736083984375, 0.1029052734375, 0.14453125, 0.110107421875, 0.1806640625, 0.1070556640625, 0.0897216796875, 0.14331054...
embed
70555419_c0
70555419
lisp
0
Title: Does eq? in Racket behave different from eq? in Guile or eq in Common Lisp? Problem title: Does eq? in Racket behave different from eq? in Guile or eq in Common Lisp? Tags: comparison, scheme, lisp, racket Problem: Does eq? in Racket behave different from eq? in Guile or eq in Common Lisp? Happy New Year! I am w...
Does eq? in Racket behave different from eq? in Guile or eq in Common Lisp? Does eq? in Racket behave different from eq? in Guile or eq in Common Lisp? comparison scheme lisp racket eq Does Racket Guile Common Lisp str1 str2 Does eq? in Racket behave different from eq? in Guile or eq in Common Lisp? Happy New Year! I a...
[ -0.01361083984375, 0.005584716796875, 0.00020122528076171875, 0.043212890625, -0.00135040283203125, 0.01055908203125, 0.01202392578125, 0.00384521484375, -0.003021240234375, 0.020263671875, -0.000713348388671875, -0.010986328125, -0.002899169921875, -0.004913330078125, -0.0230712890625, ...
[ 28, 864, 32, 2552, 27853, 68991, 12921, 53513, 133, 151301, 1261, 7008, 1295, 225490, 150370, 400, 673, 7704, 418, 304, 23, 42552, 20595, 3217, 363, 84751, 468, 420, 1884, 3688, 176377, 42238, 1957, 31635, 32354, 46549, 23186, 30646, 6626, ...
[ 0.053680419921875, 0.2071533203125, 0.1131591796875, 0.150146484375, 0.2347412109375, 0.1551513671875, 0.1480712890625, 0.19921875, 0.1513671875, 0.1256103515625, 0.1424560546875, 0.1397705078125, 0.01019287109375, 0.087890625, 0.08447265625, 0.04180908203125, 0.0985107421875, 0.13...
embed
65896993_c0
65896993
lisp
0
Title: Why the below lisp code is not giving desired result Problem title: Why the below lisp code is not giving desired result Tags: lisp Problem: Why the below lisp code is not giving desired result I have a list '((1 2 (A B C)) (2 3 (B C D)) (4 5 (C D F))) I want to process the elements in the inner list, (in this c...
Why the below lisp code is not giving desired result Why the below lisp code is not giving desired result lisp Why Why the below lisp code is not giving desired result I have a list I want to process the elements in the inner list, (in this case, I want to change (A B C) and other lists to (M M M) ). I wrote a code (pr...
[ -0.0022735595703125, 0.0167236328125, 0.0164794921875, 0.004913330078125, -0.004791259765625, 0.017578125, 0.0078125, 0.0069580078125, -0.0033416748046875, 0.00095367431640625, -0.0029754638671875, -0.00830078125, -0.004119873046875, 0.009521484375, 0.00057220458984375, 0.0138549804687...
[ 44084, 35064, 400, 7008, 18151, 83, 959, 68772, 104851, 71, 16750, 765, 5303, 3444, 9433, 80854, 75414, 15549, 335, 313, 47, 594, 276, 54397, 63923, 271, 66211, 11782, 1295, 5201, 32354, 20949, 64457, 116, 138, 9451, 190, 4527, 5701, 1660...
[ 0.11669921875, 0.1873779296875, 0.138916015625, 0.200927734375, 0.2078857421875, 0.0504150390625, 0.1572265625, 0.1285400390625, 0.1378173828125, 0.04730224609375, 0.1529541015625, 0.007354736328125, 0.1500244140625, 0.053375244140625, 0.12939453125, 0.10638427734375, 0.1343994140625...
embed
33404444_c0
33404444
lisp
0
Title: Remove a specific item in a list? Problem title: Remove a specific item in a list? Tags: lisp, list, common-lisp Problem: Remove a specific item in a list? I want to preface this by saying that yes, this is a homework problem I'm working on and I don't want the actual answer, just maybe a nudge in the right dire...
Remove a specific item in a list? Remove a specific item in a list? lisp list common-lisp Remove Remove a specific item in a list? I want to preface this by saying that yes, this is a homework problem I'm working on and I don't want the actual answer, just maybe a nudge in the right direction. Anyhoo, I'm taking a clas...
[ -0.01324462890625, 0.033935546875, 0.004150390625, 0.005889892578125, -0.02392578125, 0.01025390625, 0.0142822265625, -0.007476806640625, 0.002197265625, -0.031982421875, 0.0159912109375, -0.01080322265625, 0.000522613525390625, 0.01263427734375, -0.004608154296875, 0.00038909912109375...
[ 181139, 29458, 35735, 23, 5303, 400, 7008, 39210, 4086, 254, 10, 40404, 5368, 18244, 2967, 20697, 8561, 35166, 61007, 68336, 35971, 18507, 56037, 46876, 45646, 77635, 33022, 96551, 19336, 103391, 144570, 38937, 107730, 34627, 87388, 756, 110527...
[ 0.252197265625, 0.212646484375, 0.207275390625, 0.105712890625, 0.234375, 0.118408203125, 0.2041015625, 0.1114501953125, 0.11181640625, 0.1796875, 0.0531005859375, 0.0267181396484375, 0.0164031982421875, 0.1268310546875, 0.044769287109375, 0.0185699462890625, 0.006591796875, 0.0009...
embed
71870572_c0
71870572
lisp
0
Title: What is the problem here? I was trying to increment value but it's giving output as 0 Problem title: What is the problem here? I was trying to increment value but it's giving output as 0 Tags: lisp, common-lisp Problem: What is the problem here? I was trying to increment value but it's giving output as...
What is the problem here? I was trying to increment value but it's giving output as 0 What is the problem here? I was trying to increment value but it's giving output as 0 lisp common-lisp cand-set-count 0 What M-DASH What is the problem here? I was trying to increment value but it's giving output as 0 Been a...
[ -0.004852294921875, 0.0203857421875, 0.005340576171875, 0.0164794921875, 0.003326416015625, -0.0026092529296875, 0.0029296875, 0.00555419921875, 0.0101318359375, -0.00384521484375, -0.0123291015625, 0.0037689208984375, 0.0034332275390625, 0.00066375732421875, 0.0029754638671875, 0.0056...
[ 4865, 83, 70, 2967, 3688, 509, 31577, 158661, 34292, 1284, 3768, 68772, 140992, 237, 757, 400, 7008, 39210, 4086, 254, 7841, 3509, 71013, 276, 73686, 841, 99, 903, 21974, 3525, 16970, 9434, 959, 26366, 2367, 44691, 86869, 50944, 425, 4420...
[ 0.06817626953125, 0.07647705078125, 0.02685546875, 0.1904296875, 0.10284423828125, 0.00640869140625, 0.151123046875, 0.2001953125, 0.1905517578125, 0.0804443359375, 0.08624267578125, 0.0946044921875, 0.2369384765625, 0.0723876953125, 0.2041015625, 0.1036376953125, 0.177001953125, 0...
embed
10046695_c0
10046695
lisp
0
Title: Project visualization in Lisp Problem title: Project visualization in Lisp Tags: visualization, lisp Problem: Project visualization in Lisp Is there a tool that can generate diagrams (similar to Doxygen using Graphviz) but in the formats described by this paper: Lisp Looks Different Program Style Distribution: D...
Project visualization in Lisp Project visualization in Lisp visualization lisp Project Lisp Project visualization in Lisp Is there a tool that can generate diagrams (similar to Doxygen using Graphviz) but in the formats described by this paper: Lisp Looks Different Program Style Distribution: Determine which programmin...
[ -0.01214599609375, 0.03857421875, -0.01165771484375, 0.00439453125, -0.0125732421875, -0.00640869140625, -0.022705078125, 0.0150146484375, -0.00762939453125, -0.005706787109375, 0.008056640625, 0.0003223419189453125, -0.017333984375, 0.00927734375, 0.0101318359375, -0.004730224609375, ...
[ 27331, 21176, 47691, 23, 1261, 7008, 400, 2685, 10, 55516, 450, 831, 139392, 117233, 62318, 320, 391, 76634, 1409, 17368, 6524, 11727, 22572, 1284, 9384, 151552, 15122, 60818, 242520, 7663, 57845, 75571, 30524, 56037, 20623, 97249, 30563, 993...
[ 0.1600341796875, 0.177734375, 0.10986328125, 0.069091796875, 0.1719970703125, 0.22607421875, 0.09796142578125, 0.0328369140625, 0.02178955078125, 0.24169921875, 0.0079345703125, 0.06414794921875, 0.1866455078125, 0.273193359375, 0.084716796875, 0.0310211181640625, 0.0401611328125, ...
embed
21353376_c0
21353376
lisp
0
Title: How to use double-float? Problem title: How to use double-float? Tags: common-lisp, lisp Problem: How to use double-float? I am struggling a little trying to figure out how to tell Lisp that I want to use double-float values. Suppose I have: (let ((x 1)) (format t "~A~%" (/ x 3.0))) Which gives: 0.33333334 If I ...
How to use double-float? How to use double-float? common-lisp lisp How How to use double-float? I am struggling a little trying to figure out how to tell Lisp that I want to use double-float values. Suppose I have: Which gives: If I want to use double-float, I tried this: So the result is not a double-float. I can, how...
[ 0.013671875, 0.00927734375, 0.0062255859375, -0.0196533203125, -0.001708984375, 0.01458740234375, -0.01226806640625, -0.01177978515625, 0.00439453125, -0.013671875, -0.00341796875, -0.007781982421875, -0.003448486328125, -0.0255126953125, -0.0003337860107421875, 0.00133514404296875, ...
[ 11249, 47, 4527, 41929, 9, 52347, 257, 39210, 4086, 254, 400, 7008, 237875, 10176, 26366, 14192, 1261, 3444, 142424, 121691, 76199, 37842, 903, 16750, 959, 831, 37772, 1884, 13204, 449, 3173, 32354, 187, 8962, 282, 9523, 186, 23, 137633, ...
[ 0.08203125, 0.06585693359375, 0.1798095703125, 0.2125244140625, 0.0416259765625, 0.2529296875, 0.1778564453125, 0.095458984375, 0.07598876953125, 0.1295166015625, 0.08428955078125, 0.1922607421875, 0.06158447265625, 0.0220184326171875, 0.02337646484375, 0.0870361328125, 0.12817382812...
embed
38163603_c0
38163603
lisp
0
Title: Clojure, sum a list of vectors, recording positions along the way Problem title: Clojure, sum a list of vectors, recording positions along the way Tags: recursion, tail-recursion, vector, lisp, clojure Problem: Clojure, sum a list of vectors, recording positions along the way Say I have a list of vectors ([0 0] ...
Clojure, sum a list of vectors, recording positions along the way Clojure, sum a list of vectors, recording positions along the way recursion tail-recursion vector lisp clojure Clojure Clojure, sum a list of vectors, recording positions along the way Say I have a list of vectors I want to be able to add the list of vec...
[ -0.00933837890625, 0.0380859375, 0.005828857421875, 0.018310546875, -0.015869140625, 0.018310546875, -0.0054931640625, -0.005462646484375, 0.00860595703125, -0.0269775390625, 0.00567626953125, 0.0091552734375, 0.0010223388671875, 0.00469970703125, -0.0120849609375, 0.003662109375, -0...
[ 51053, 461, 107, 10554, 5303, 22834, 22230, 182304, 19069, 33233, 3917, 195625, 46741, 48650, 173, 18770, 400, 7008, 20450, 765, 3444, 19048, 15190, 25842, 17164, 12638, 36998, 6496, 201, 69307, 37842, 18151, 645, 118664, 14012, 2271, 170, 56...
[ 0.153076171875, 0.1849365234375, 0.171875, 0.2333984375, 0.1531982421875, 0.200439453125, 0.1875, 0.1944580078125, 0.2349853515625, 0.0826416015625, 0.116943359375, 0.15283203125, 0.1697998046875, 0.0885009765625, 0.1461181640625, 0.1025390625, 0.013397216796875, 0.10577392578125, ...
embed
64600687_c0
64600687
lisp
0
Title: LISP Recursive Triangle Problem title: LISP Recursive Triangle Tags: common-lisp, return, lisp, recursion Problem: LISP Recursive Triangle My recursive call seems to not be working, I am trying to make a triangle given an integer, and with the help of you guys I was finally able to make the string print on the s...
LISP Recursive Triangle LISP Recursive Triangle common-lisp return lisp recursion LISP Recursive Triangle Nope LISP Recursive Triangle My recursive call seems to not be working, I am trying to make a triangle given an integer, and with the help of you guys I was finally able to make the string print on the same line, t...
[ -0.0113525390625, 0.01129150390625, -0.002166748046875, 0.00089263916015625, -0.001617431640625, 0.0172119140625, 0.01312255859375, -0.005889892578125, -0.004119873046875, 0.02685546875, -0.005340576171875, -0.0301513671875, -0.0125732421875, -0.0133056640625, -0.015380859375, -0.00610...
[ 16970, 9434, 853, 48650, 5844, 4699, 109217, 39210, 4086, 254, 30646, 400, 7008, 195625, 1830, 1081, 11782, 37202, 959, 20697, 31577, 3249, 1927, 34475, 892, 1505, 4358, 79315, 28412, 5701, 13315, 26785, 41170, 20028, 106, 3564, 2448, 15700, ...
[ 0.1240234375, 0.2010498046875, 0.049957275390625, 0.2054443359375, 0.155029296875, 0.1865234375, 0.2073974609375, 0.0927734375, 0.106689453125, 0.176025390625, 0.2154541015625, 0.1201171875, 0.2044677734375, 0.209716796875, 0.0909423828125, 0.042327880859375, 0.1751708984375, 0.007...
embed
38447353_c0
38447353
lisp
0
Title: Sorting a list from max to min by of index number in LISP? Problem title: Sorting a list from max to min by of index number in LISP? Tags: indexing, lisp, sorting, elisp, common-lisp Problem: Sorting a list from max to min by of index number in LISP? I am trying to write a function that takes a list, sorts it fr...
Sorting a list from max to min by of index number in LISP? Sorting a list from max to min by of index number in LISP? indexing lisp sorting elisp common-lisp max high both 0 Sorting LISP LargestNumberIndex Indexes Sorting a list from max to min by of index number in LISP? I am trying to write a function that takes a li...
[ -0.0103759765625, 0.0194091796875, 0.01611328125, -0.003173828125, -0.0263671875, 0.01092529296875, 0.000579833984375, -0.015625, 0.01470947265625, 0.0023040771484375, -0.006683349609375, 0.0037841796875, -0.004364013671875, 0.01025390625, 0.00653076171875, -0.01513671875, 0.00199890...
[ 53666, 214, 5303, 1295, 18389, 47, 881, 390, 111, 63262, 14012, 23, 16970, 9434, 400, 7008, 12096, 15296, 39210, 4086, 254, 11192, 15044, 757, 181268, 271, 18444, 26278, 39659, 31471, 31577, 33022, 32354, 51776, 27226, 76199, 7311, 19069, 8...
[ 0.20263671875, 0.056427001953125, 0.200439453125, 0.072021484375, 0.1641845703125, 0.1019287109375, 0.2120361328125, 0.1563720703125, 0.07861328125, 0.1663818359375, 0.1578369140625, 0.05511474609375, 0.138427734375, 0.2191162109375, 0.10076904296875, 0.1865234375, 0.197021484375, ...
embed
46995869_c1
46995869
lisp
1
*db*))) which I wrote as: (defun make-assignment-expr (field value) `(setf (getf row ,field) ,value)) (defun make-assignments-list (fields) (loop while fields collecting (make-assignment-expr (pop fields) (pop fields)))) (defmacro update (selector-fn &rest assignments) (setf *db* (mapcar `#'(lambda (row) (when (funcal...
*db*))) which I wrote as: (defun make-assignment-expr (field value) `(setf (getf row ,field) ,value)) (defun make-assignments-list (fields) (loop while fields collecting (make-assignment-expr (pop fields) (pop fields)))) (defmacro update (selector-fn &rest assignments) (setf *db* (mapcar `#'(lambda (row) (when (funcal...
[ 0.009765625, 0.01708984375, 0.01483154296875, 0.00616455078125, -0.0172119140625, 0.0157470703125, -0.009521484375, 0.007171630859375, 0.01324462890625, 0.017822265625, -0.01129150390625, 0.004058837890625, 0.01251220703125, -0.0286865234375, -0.006134033203125, -0.00860595703125, 0....
[ 48073, 1639, 32149, 54397, 237, 112, 16498, 3249, 162, 31304, 674, 83613, 42, 28394, 34292, 3509, 420, 3794, 15555, 27494, 9035, 6562, 28354, 12960, 44457, 43799, 55898, 33554, 15322, 28350, 187075, 14783, 56644, 95486, 62346, 3284, 6492, 85,...
[ 0.1654052734375, 0.0975341796875, 0.1666259765625, 0.094970703125, 0.0181732177734375, 0.1065673828125, 0.1663818359375, 0.0882568359375, 0.022735595703125, 0.2073974609375, 0.0087890625, 0.08935546875, 0.1260986328125, 0.141357421875, 0.1593017578125, 0.073974609375, 0.112548828125,...
embed
28764125_c0
28764125
lisp
0
Title: Common Lisp: How to quote parenthese in SBCL Problem title: Common Lisp: How to quote parenthese in SBCL Tags: sbcl, quote, lisp, common-lisp Problem: Common Lisp: How to quote parenthese in SBCL In Common Lisp, the special operator quote makes whatever followed by un-evaluated, like (quote a) -> a (quote {}) ->...
Common Lisp: How to quote parenthese in SBCL Common Lisp: How to quote parenthese in SBCL sbcl quote lisp common-lisp Common Lisp How SBCL CL-USER NIL id3-tag DEFCLASS MAJOR-VERSION INITARG ACCESSOR Common Lisp: How to quote parenthese in SBCL In Common Lisp, the special operator quote makes whatever followed by un-eva...
[ 0.0189208984375, 0.021240234375, 0.00860595703125, 0.00787353515625, -0.030517578125, 0.01043701171875, 0.00665283203125, -0.01116943359375, -0.00127410888671875, 0.0037841796875, -0.015380859375, -0.0234375, -0.0027008056640625, 0.0013275146484375, -0.000946044921875, -0.0007514953613...
[ 151301, 1261, 7008, 11249, 47, 66747, 49129, 1106, 184, 23, 90944, 37486, 91, 275, 34937, 400, 39210, 4086, 254, 46323, 1062, 50184, 541, 16444, 3447, 27495, 6936, 1514, 46705, 33255, 99085, 37142, 724, 194695, 360, 5361, 39933, 30482, 8977...
[ 0.208251953125, 0.15087890625, 0.1837158203125, 0.076416015625, 0.0172576904296875, 0.257568359375, 0.1656494140625, 0.1846923828125, 0.1339111328125, 0.050323486328125, 0.14013671875, 0.1793212890625, 0.001129150390625, 0.06170654296875, 0.1416015625, 0.059722900390625, 0.0913085937...
embed
74555932_c0
74555932
lisp
0
Title: how to return the value of a prime number while trying to print the sum of prime numbers in a range of numbers from check-prime to prime-sum Problem title: how to return the value of a prime number while trying to print the sum of prime numbers in a range of numbers from check-prime to prime-sum Tags: lisp Probl...
how to return the value of a prime number while trying to print the sum of prime numbers in a range of numbers from check-prime to prime-sum how to return the value of a prime number while trying to print the sum of prime numbers in a range of numbers from check-prime to prime-sum lisp check-prime 2 range1 range2 how t...
[ -0.015380859375, 0.0174560546875, 0.0164794921875, 0.017333984375, -0.0017242431640625, 0.0322265625, -0.00640869140625, 0.00823974609375, 0.0098876953125, 0.01434326171875, 0.00628662109375, 0.01806640625, 0.0032806396484375, -0.017822265625, 0.0164794921875, 0.0125732421875, -0.003...
[ 3642, 30646, 34292, 20809, 14012, 12960, 31577, 28412, 10554, 101935, 37457, 1295, 12765, 114654, 47, 11832, 111, 400, 7008, 116, 304, 142424, 107730, 38937, 86531, 18499, 110, 29568 ]
[ 0.0694580078125, 0.2030029296875, 0.1876220703125, 0.1898193359375, 0.154541015625, 0.0235137939453125, 0.1029052734375, 0.148193359375, 0.194091796875, 0.12646484375, 0.1435546875, 0.0322265625, 0.1492919921875, 0.16064453125, 0.070068359375, 0.1846923828125, 0.0274200439453125, 0...
embed
61378192_c0
61378192
lisp
0
Title: different ":cl" package handling between Common Lisp implementations Problem title: different ":cl" package handling between Common Lisp implementations Tags: sbcl, common-lisp, lisp Problem: different ":cl" package handling between Common Lisp implementations debugger invoked on a COMMON-LIS...
different ":cl" package handling between Common Lisp implementations different ":cl" package handling between Common Lisp implementations sbcl common-lisp lisp Common Lisp COMMON-LISP:STYLE-WARNING Undefined STYLE-WARNING COMMON-LISP:UNDEFINED-FUNCTION THREAD RUNNING different ":cl" package handling...
[ 0.01129150390625, -0.0130615234375, 0.00148773193359375, 0.0096435546875, -0.02099609375, 0.00482177734375, 0.01483154296875, -0.00160980224609375, 0.000804901123046875, -0.00897216796875, 0.009521484375, -0.011474609375, 0.0194091796875, 0.0010528564453125, 0.0031890869140625, -0.0128...
[ 12921, 12, 34937, 41502, 98169, 45064, 17721, 151301, 1261, 7008, 208124, 275, 39210, 4086, 254, 400, 82707, 67616, 683, 224170, 60873, 79912, 5983, 31436, 211210, 129525, 919, 175560, 41519, 130747, 44084, 903, 123166, 53383, 197648, 61924, 36...
[ 0.287109375, 0.104248046875, 0.2381591796875, 0.025848388671875, 0.22412109375, 0.16845703125, 0.10345458984375, 0.2069091796875, 0.179931640625, 0.2083740234375, 0.1640625, 0.03424072265625, 0.100830078125, 0.0706787109375, 0.111572265625, 0.0672607421875, 0.1785888671875, 0.12866...
embed
36192383_c0
36192383
lisp
0
Title: Extracting an item from a list of lists? Problem title: Extracting an item from a list of lists? Tags: common-lisp, lisp Problem: Extracting an item from a list of lists? I'm doing a lisp related assignment for class and one of the problems requires us to use mapcar to "extract" an item from a list (whether that...
Extracting an item from a list of lists? Extracting an item from a list of lists? common-lisp lisp a Extracting Extracting an item from a list of lists? I'm doing a lisp related assignment for class and one of the problems requires us to use mapcar to "extract" an item from a list (whether that means that he wants us t...
[ 0.00121307373046875, 0.0045166015625, 0.006683349609375, 0.005279541015625, -0.0074462890625, 0.01348876953125, 0.00250244140625, 0.0108642578125, 0.0032958984375, 0.002685546875, -0.0003566741943359375, -0.033935546875, -0.0201416015625, 0.032470703125, -0.025146484375, -0.00005388259...
[ 31501, 238, 1916, 35735, 1295, 5303, 7, 39210, 4086, 254, 400, 7008, 10, 95486, 18507, 44402, 4527, 22288, 3284, 112779, 15390, 86171, 28412, 87388, 1884, 100094, 17368, 927, 138, 6562, 116, 13956, 2046, 50960, 48903, 645, 96704, 2053, 3034...
[ 0.2188720703125, 0.1148681640625, 0.09912109375, 0.1890869140625, 0.1397705078125, 0.221435546875, 0.08203125, 0.09136962890625, 0.103271484375, 0.1148681640625, 0.10137939453125, 0.1468505859375, 0.0170745849609375, 0.0645751953125, 0.07379150390625, 0.064697265625, 0.05889892578125...
embed
75886966_c0
75886966
lisp
0
Title: Common LISP - How to return statement Problem title: Common LISP - How to return statement Tags: metaprogramming, macros, lisp, common-lisp Problem: Common LISP - How to return statement I'm currently trying to learn how to program in "Common Lisp". Therefore, I'm currently dealing with a minor problem regarding...
Common LISP - How to return statement Common LISP - How to return statement metaprogramming macros lisp common-lisp Common LISP How square_loop Common LISP - How to return statement I'm currently trying to learn how to program in "Common Lisp". Therefore, I'm currently dealing with a minor problem regarding the definit...
[ 0.01080322265625, 0.00225830078125, -0.0023193359375, -0.000576019287109375, 0.00823974609375, 0.0103759765625, -0.004058837890625, -0.016845703125, 0.01361083984375, -0.037353515625, 0.00994873046875, -0.002044677734375, -0.0155029296875, -0.0004520416259765625, 0.0130615234375, -0.00...
[ 151301, 16970, 9434, 11249, 47, 30646, 63805, 23550, 28966, 111789, 400, 7008, 39210, 4086, 254, 108047, 28354, 1528, 10770, 3796, 1261, 184017, 43967, 2967, 80934, 111, 85083, 5608, 4488, 28960, 51776, 5303, 101935, 28282, 142458, 201505, 2762...
[ 0.189208984375, 0.1143798828125, 0.18212890625, 0.100830078125, 0.05548095703125, 0.26708984375, 0.2498779296875, 0.08551025390625, 0.1248779296875, 0.22509765625, 0.069091796875, 0.1859130859375, 0.135009765625, 0.068359375, 0.0867919921875, 0.176025390625, 0.256591796875, 0.11950...
embed
44544075_c0
44544075
lisp
0
Title: Write on file Common Lisp Problem title: Write on file Common Lisp Tags: lisp, common-lisp Problem: Write on file Common Lisp the problem is: i've a list of lists of lists like this: (((1 2) (3 4) (5 6)) ((7 8) (9 0))) i've to write it in a file, where numbers in every list of lists is printed in a line like thi...
Write on file Common Lisp Write on file Common Lisp lisp common-lisp Write Common Lisp write_pfs Tab write_points write_point Write on file Common Lisp the problem is: i've a list of lists of lists like this: i've to write it in a file, where numbers in every list of lists is printed in a line like this: ...... means t...
[ 0.01483154296875, 0.0036163330078125, -0.00701904296875, 0.008056640625, -0.022705078125, -0.0027618408203125, -0.0019989013671875, -0.0036773681640625, 0.0137939453125, 0.015380859375, 0.009765625, -0.01373291015625, 0.007415771484375, 0.004638671875, -0.00148773193359375, -0.00224304...
[ 601, 18781, 98, 11435, 151301, 1261, 7008, 400, 39210, 4086, 254, 33022, 39557, 22193, 38496, 2967, 272, 5303, 23, 101935, 11907, 28412, 13315, 1884, 903, 30147, 26950, 831, 765, 1286, 111, 29479, 15490, 40956, 678, 59636, 29822, 9384, 1956...
[ 0.11083984375, 0.1671142578125, 0.207763671875, 0.198486328125, 0.1614990234375, 0.134521484375, 0.163330078125, 0.076904296875, 0.1072998046875, 0.06219482421875, 0.08673095703125, 0.1922607421875, 0.0362548828125, 0.13671875, 0.1514892578125, 0.124267578125, 0.040802001953125, 0....
embed
46457082_c0
46457082
lisp
0
Title: Lisp labels function deleted before used Problem title: Lisp labels function deleted before used Tags: lisp, function, common-lisp Problem: Lisp labels function deleted before used I'm trying to use a local function using labels to allow my function to recurse. This is the code: (defun my-replace (e1 e2 L) "Perf...
Lisp labels function deleted before used Lisp labels function deleted before used lisp function common-lisp Lisp Perform Used Note Deleting LABELS MY-REPLACE-REC Warning Lisp labels function deleted before used I'm trying to use a local function using labels to allow my function to recurse. This is the code: When I hav...
[ 0.002777099609375, 0.018798828125, 0.005889892578125, 0.01312255859375, -0.025634765625, -0.01025390625, -0.018310546875, -0.00360107421875, 0.004425048828125, -0.0291748046875, 0.01312255859375, -0.00830078125, 0.003173828125, 0.0054931640625, 0.05810546875, 0.006591796875, -0.00509...
[ 1261, 7008, 67967, 7, 32354, 154109, 71, 8108, 11814, 400, 39210, 4086, 254, 169033, 345, 5281, 18622, 262, 133, 3358, 129656, 54133, 165547, 866, 61019, 11766, 441, 5550, 31577, 4527, 4000, 17368, 63769, 195625, 13, 18151, 765, 34264, 1515...
[ 0.1776123046875, 0.20654296875, 0.27197265625, 0.059539794921875, 0.204345703125, 0.2083740234375, 0.0380859375, 0.1336669921875, 0.15966796875, 0.142333984375, 0.08392333984375, 0.123046875, 0.1475830078125, 0.1607666015625, 0.0947265625, 0.0255584716796875, 0.1822509765625, 0.062...
embed
41938653_c0
41938653
lisp
0
Title: Trim VLA-OBJECTS Outside Circles automatically without selecting anything Problem title: Trim VLA-OBJECTS Outside Circles automatically without selecting anything Tags: lisp, autolisp, geometry Problem: Trim VLA-OBJECTS Outside Circles automatically without selecting anything what I want to do is to trim some po...
Trim VLA-OBJECTS Outside Circles automatically without selecting anything Trim VLA-OBJECTS Outside Circles automatically without selecting anything lisp autolisp geometry Trim VLA-OBJECTS Outside Circles Entities VLA-OBJECT Break Extend Trim VLA-OBJECTS Outside Circles automatically without selecting anything what I wa...
[ 0.0167236328125, 0.0166015625, 0.00433349609375, 0.03857421875, -0.0238037109375, 0.000469207763671875, 0.002838134765625, 0.0341796875, 0.0118408203125, -0.0235595703125, -0.01361083984375, 0.009033203125, -0.0020294189453125, -0.011962890625, 0.0240478515625, -0.0235595703125, 0.00...
[ 4699, 39, 310, 8356, 38296, 1375, 114781, 13538, 8752, 163731, 7, 191082, 15490, 36849, 23937, 9, 400, 7008, 1809, 4086, 254, 700, 87739, 16511, 131904, 5443, 510, 3444, 85247, 35874, 59801, 57, 96760, 31075, 48461, 22710, 25632, 3917, 2681...
[ 0.206298828125, 0.0733642578125, 0.11669921875, 0.19677734375, 0.1512451171875, 0.15625, 0.120361328125, 0.1248779296875, 0.20068359375, 0.210693359375, 0.011444091796875, 0.2183837890625, 0.0645751953125, 0.1280517578125, 0.10198974609375, 0.0009765625, 0.1171875, 0.1773681640625,...
embed
3121145_c0
3121145
lisp
0
Title: How do I write a macro-defining macro in common lisp Problem title: How do I write a macro-defining macro in common lisp Tags: macros, lisp, common-lisp Problem: How do I write a macro-defining macro in common lisp I have about two macros (and climbing) in my codebase that look like this: (defmacro def-stat-meth...
How do I write a macro-defining macro in common lisp How do I write a macro-defining macro in common lisp macros lisp common-lisp How How do I write a macro-defining macro in common lisp I have about two macros (and climbing) in my codebase that look like this: and this: Each of the macros has the following calling syn...
[ 0.00958251953125, 0.0255126953125, -0.0159912109375, -0.004913330078125, 0.00738525390625, 0.0128173828125, -0.0201416015625, -0.00848388671875, 0.009765625, -0.020751953125, -0.0157470703125, -0.01300048828125, -0.0004062652587890625, 0.0021820068359375, 0.004180908203125, -0.01831054...
[ 11249, 87, 33022, 111789, 49919, 449, 23, 39210, 400, 7008, 54, 10, 7, 4086, 254, 9, 6626, 194637, 214, 18151, 37382, 6713, 1884, 98423, 159029, 6002, 86531, 420, 17346, 1928, 7352, 37457, 11, 5416, 5445, 2806, 3584, 31, 11627, 55300, 7...
[ 0.06805419921875, 0.00775146484375, 0.1982421875, 0.2412109375, 0.1724853515625, 0.0887451171875, 0.037872314453125, 0.1640625, 0.121826171875, 0.1881103515625, 0.00604248046875, 0.0181732177734375, 0.0196685791015625, 0.09417724609375, 0.143798828125, 0.010772705078125, 0.0261383056...
embed
3911565_c0
3911565
lisp
0
Title: What is wrong with this Lisp Function? Problem title: What is wrong with this Lisp Function? Tags: function, clisp, recursion, lisp, functional-programming Problem: What is wrong with this Lisp Function? This function is a CLisp function, this is part of a homework problem, but which is supposed to be written in...
What is wrong with this Lisp Function? What is wrong with this Lisp Function? function clisp recursion lisp functional-programming What Lisp What is wrong with this Lisp Function? This function is a CLisp function, this is part of a homework problem, but which is supposed to be written in this different format (the sec...
[ -0.0240478515625, 0.029541015625, 0.0162353515625, -0.0107421875, 0.000301361083984375, 0.024169921875, -0.00994873046875, 0.00186920166015625, -0.004852294921875, 0.00167083740234375, 0.0159912109375, 0.003326416015625, -0.005096435546875, -0.01373291015625, 0.02880859375, 0.003662109...
[ 4865, 83, 44691, 678, 903, 1261, 7008, 28670, 10763, 32354, 95701, 195625, 1830, 400, 123309, 28966, 3293, 46323, 164, 254, 5368, 18244, 2967, 134598, 59121, 12921, 9384, 17932, 5608, 5646, 881, 34292, 39, 136, 18389, 594, 30646, 5303, 892,...
[ 0.0706787109375, 0.0660400390625, 0.207275390625, 0.1368408203125, 0.10455322265625, 0.186279296875, 0.24755859375, 0.1802978515625, 0.1209716796875, 0.200927734375, 0.095458984375, 0.16552734375, 0.001129150390625, 0.1151123046875, 0.13623046875, 0.0809326171875, 0.01898193359375, ...
embed
7369182_c0
7369182
lisp
0
Title: Clojure macro throws "CompilerException java.lang.IllegalStateException: Var clojure.core/unquote is unbound" when called Problem title: Clojure macro throws "CompilerException java.lang.IllegalStateException: Var clojure.core/unquote is unbound" when called Tags: macros, lisp, functional-pro...
Clojure macro throws "CompilerException java.lang.IllegalStateException: Var clojure.core/unquote is unbound" when called Clojure macro throws "CompilerException java.lang.IllegalStateException: Var clojure.core/unquote is unbound" when called macros lisp functional-programming clojure CompilerExcep...
[ -0.0087890625, 0.0181884765625, -0.0167236328125, -0.0234375, -0.0250244140625, 0.0087890625, 0.0169677734375, -0.002197265625, -0.00787353515625, -0.01409912109375, -0.010009765625, -0.01214599609375, 0.0023040771484375, 0.0030975341796875, 0.02197265625, -0.016845703125, -0.0252685...
[ 51053, 461, 107, 111789, 104250, 108161, 34759, 19279, 63928, 79, 330, 3066, 86966, 135206, 3323, 20450, 30854, 309, 68726, 83, 51, 99091, 35839, 7, 400, 7008, 123309, 28966, 15612, 9520, 76234, 919, 52099, 24687, 3229, 31577, 33022, 11782, ...
[ 0.1558837890625, 0.1875, 0.1104736328125, 0.1817626953125, 0.143310546875, 0.0841064453125, 0.10009765625, 0.06195068359375, 0.1300048828125, 0.03515625, 0.1278076171875, 0.06884765625, 0.1429443359375, 0.069091796875, 0.1295166015625, 0.13623046875, 0.172607421875, 0.0596923828125...
embed
58927489_c0
58927489
lisp
0
Title: Is it possible to check/get function type or its signature at runtime in SBCL/Common Lisp? Problem title: Is it possible to check/get function type or its signature at runtime in SBCL/Common Lisp? Tags: function, common-lisp, types, runtime, lisp Problem: Is it possible to check/get function type or its signatur...
Is it possible to check/get function type or its signature at runtime in SBCL/Common Lisp? Is it possible to check/get function type or its signature at runtime in SBCL/Common Lisp? function common-lisp types runtime lisp SBCL Common Lisp FAIL TYPEP NUMBER VALUES REST Condition SIMPLE-ERROR Is it possible to check/get ...
[ 0.00830078125, -0.005035400390625, 0.00762939453125, 0.00165557861328125, -0.031494140625, 0.00029754638671875, -0.0076904296875, -0.0078125, -0.00665283203125, -0.0145263671875, -0.00093841552734375, -0.005462646484375, -0.01007080078125, 0.00238037109375, 0.005218505859375, 0.0136108...
[ 2071, 442, 7722, 47, 12765, 64, 3794, 32354, 10644, 707, 6863, 138256, 99, 11675, 6032, 23, 90944, 37486, 10770, 3796, 1261, 7008, 39210, 4086, 254, 52895, 400, 151301, 15491, 16444, 384, 94588, 21290, 109020, 24480, 310, 89994, 627, 21828,...
[ 0.046112060546875, 0.031646728515625, 0.1539306640625, 0.045166015625, 0.203857421875, 0.027801513671875, 0.10369873046875, 0.2362060546875, 0.25830078125, 0.0172119140625, 0.043792724609375, 0.2186279296875, 0.0396728515625, 0.1026611328125, 0.1295166015625, 0.02935791015625, 0.1278...
embed
8507695_c0
8507695
lisp
0
Title: Using texcount in Emacs to determine word count of Latex or tex file (wanting optional parameters) Problem title: Using texcount in Emacs to determine word count of Latex or tex file (wanting optional parameters) Tags: emacs, elisp, lisp, auctex, latex Problem: Using texcount in Emacs to determine word count of ...
Using texcount in Emacs to determine word count of Latex or tex file (wanting optional parameters) Using texcount in Emacs to determine word count of Latex or tex file (wanting optional parameters) emacs elisp lisp auctex latex Using Emacs Latex Using texcount in Emacs to determine word count of Latex or tex file (want...
[ 0.0087890625, -0.00994873046875, 0.003448486328125, -0.00762939453125, -0.0064697265625, 0.0240478515625, 0.005584716796875, -0.015380859375, -0.00982666015625, -0.0150146484375, -0.0042724609375, -0.00022411346435546875, -0.00007343292236328125, -0.003448486328125, -0.0002899169921875, ...
[ 345, 24371, 71013, 23, 85269, 4439, 83324, 2565, 54529, 239, 11435, 3206, 35829, 171859, 352, 2263, 15296, 7008, 400, 531, 21, 32354, 4527, 7, 3638, 1884, 75101, 59335, 11249, 2811, 40383, 107730, 50717, 64457, 51042, 678, 9, 38893, 115026,...
[ 0.0308837890625, 0.2208251953125, 0.2401123046875, 0.019927978515625, 0.1810302734375, 0.1923828125, 0.1339111328125, 0.1728515625, 0.2052001953125, 0.0927734375, 0.0927734375, 0.04644775390625, 0.1204833984375, 0.1756591796875, 0.0716552734375, 0.0784912109375, 0.00994873046875, 0...
embed
47419873_c1
47419873
lisp
1
in_string delta_fn) 0 ("a" "b" "b" "b") ((0 "a" 0) (0 "b" 1) (1 "a" 0) (1 "b" 1)) ((0 "a" 0)) That last line: ((0 "a" 0)) is a result of the (writeln current_state) command after the lambda function runs to find its match in the delta_fn list. I thought I could just type (cdr (cdr current_state)) right there to get th...
in_string delta_fn) 0 ("a" "b" "b" "b") ((0 "a" 0) (0 "b" 1) (1 "a" 0) (1 "b" 1)) ((0 "a" 0)) That last line: ((0 "a" 0)) is a result of the (writeln current_state) command after the lambda function runs to find its match in the delta_fn list. I thought I could just type (cdr (cdr current_state)) right there to get th...
[ -0.01226806640625, 0.00311279296875, 0.01123046875, 0.02197265625, -0.0211181640625, 0.01104736328125, -0.0009613037109375, -0.004852294921875, 0.00909423828125, 0.00139617919921875, 0.00823974609375, -0.0240478515625, -0.0263671875, 0.006256103515625, -0.0206298828125, 0.0043640136718...
[ 23, 91693, 40703, 454, 14783, 757, 11, 275, 2389, 22085, 4879, 4568, 13315, 83, 16750, 5429, 44148, 43581, 61340, 75101, 7103, 21, 6492, 85, 32354, 127877, 7413, 14858, 5303, 5809, 10644, 7569, 2046, 50960, 35735, 140992, 959, 831, 160404, ...
[ 0.16064453125, 0.2154541015625, 0.2548828125, 0.03369140625, 0.1854248046875, 0.24462890625, 0.178955078125, 0.086181640625, 0.21630859375, 0.06939697265625, 0.002410888671875, 0.0633544921875, 0.059844970703125, 0.0667724609375, 0.101318359375, 0.011627197265625, 0.07086181640625, ...
embed
28304197_c0
28304197
lisp
0
Title: How to call a macro with a parameter instead of list in LISP? Problem title: How to call a macro with a parameter instead of list in LISP? Tags: common-lisp, lisp Problem: How to call a macro with a parameter instead of list in LISP? Based on the example provide in the practical common lisp reference, I define a...
How to call a macro with a parameter instead of list in LISP? How to call a macro with a parameter instead of list in LISP? common-lisp lisp How LISP NOM INITARG ACCESSOR INITFORM TEST LIST How to call a macro with a parameter instead of list in LISP? Based on the example provide in the practical common lisp reference,...
[ -0.0166015625, 0.0218505859375, -0.0169677734375, -0.0098876953125, 0.01416015625, 0.0225830078125, 0.000507354736328125, -0.006256103515625, 0.01190185546875, -0.018310546875, -0.010986328125, -0.0264892578125, 0.00665283203125, 0.00457763671875, 0.00982666015625, -0.02294921875, -0...
[ 11249, 11782, 111789, 678, 10, 171859, 64457, 111, 5303, 23, 16970, 9434, 47, 39210, 4086, 254, 400, 7008, 102298, 99085, 37142, 724, 194695, 24638, 98533, 384, 21828, 195977, 27781, 138155, 91067, 61924, 28282, 18507, 134629, 32354, 24897, 1...
[ 0.048797607421875, 0.185546875, 0.250244140625, 0.114501953125, 0.073486328125, 0.271728515625, 0.15576171875, 0.0281982421875, 0.197265625, 0.038238525390625, 0.127197265625, 0.21533203125, 0.004730224609375, 0.0885009765625, 0.1029052734375, 0.1395263671875, 0.116455078125, 0.148...
embed
43966060_c0
43966060
lisp
0
Title: How would I make a matrix in elisp? ( and how does Emacs Cal do it?) Problem title: How would I make a matrix in elisp? ( and how does Emacs Cal do it?) Tags: lisp, list, emacs Problem: How would I make a matrix in elisp? ( and how does Emacs Cal do it?) I'm interested in using elisp to practice implementing som...
How would I make a matrix in elisp? ( and how does Emacs Cal do it?) How would I make a matrix in elisp? ( and how does Emacs Cal do it?) lisp list emacs How Emacs Cal How would I make a matrix in elisp? ( and how does Emacs Cal do it?) I'm interested in using elisp to practice implementing some linear algebra algorith...
[ 0.02587890625, 0.004547119140625, 0.004180908203125, -0.01507568359375, 0.0177001953125, 0.007598876953125, -0.005645751953125, 0.00567626953125, -0.00469970703125, -0.004608154296875, -0.01275634765625, 0.0024261474609375, -0.0262451171875, 0.0019989013671875, -0.03125, -0.01086425781...
[ 11249, 2806, 87, 3249, 10, 50944, 425, 23, 15296, 7008, 3642, 85269, 4439, 9113, 400, 5303, 352, 2263, 7, 60892, 17368, 41361, 29479, 192617, 429, 234873, 175870, 151814, 18, 8060, 6024, 157955, 10298, 39210, 3871, 20654, 2046, 142424, 6326...
[ 0.09326171875, 0.11181640625, 0.022552490234375, 0.1307373046875, 0.09326171875, 0.2247314453125, 0.202392578125, 0.0999755859375, 0.1483154296875, 0.245361328125, 0.018096923828125, 0.1561279296875, 0.1539306640625, 0.21240234375, 0.10308837890625, 0.1483154296875, 0.07366943359375,...
embed
43268937_c0
43268937
lisp
0
Title: Unbound variable in edwin scheme Problem title: Unbound variable in edwin scheme Tags: recursion, scheme, lisp, edwin Problem: Unbound variable in edwin scheme I'm learning Scheme for the first time, and for practice I'm trying to write a program that returns a list of a specified length with all values equal to...
Unbound variable in edwin scheme Unbound variable in edwin scheme recursion scheme lisp edwin Unbound C-x C-e RESTART Specify Define Start Unbound variable in edwin scheme I'm learning Scheme for the first time, and for practice I'm trying to write a program that returns a list of a specified length with all values equ...
[ 0.0033416748046875, 0.0341796875, 0.007537841796875, 0.00860595703125, 0.0001888275146484375, -0.0019683837890625, 0.0008392333984375, 0.00909423828125, -0.007080078125, -0.01409912109375, 0.00341796875, -0.0245361328125, 0.00787353515625, -0.00244140625, 0.0118408203125, 0.01129150390...
[ 992, 99091, 77336, 2223, 9494, 150370, 195625, 400, 7008, 313, 9, 425, 13, 627, 21828, 47136, 24990, 40383, 262, 64552, 13794, 52080, 34702, 282, 41361, 31577, 33022, 1528, 30646, 5303, 58735, 140909, 756, 142424, 105950, 615, 78999, 33261, ...
[ 0.1236572265625, 0.25244140625, 0.2978515625, 0.08294677734375, 0.2181396484375, 0.2239990234375, 0.172119140625, 0.04913330078125, 0.142333984375, 0.065185546875, 0.05572509765625, 0.128662109375, 0.1575927734375, 0.03228759765625, 0.039764404296875, 0.10107421875, 0.10205078125, ...
embed
790976_c0
790976
lisp
0
Title: How to set up MIT Scheme for 6.001 in Ubuntu 8.10 Problem title: How to set up MIT Scheme for 6.001 in Ubuntu 8.10 Tags: lisp, linux, mit-scheme, scheme, ubuntu Problem: How to set up MIT Scheme for 6.001 in Ubuntu 8.10 I play to self-study 6.001 with the video lectures and lecture handouts. However, I have some...
How to set up MIT Scheme for 6.001 in Ubuntu 8.10 How to set up MIT Scheme for 6.001 in Ubuntu 8.10 lisp linux mit-scheme scheme ubuntu How MIT Scheme Ubuntu How to set up MIT Scheme for 6.001 in Ubuntu 8.10 I play to self-study 6.001 with the video lectures and lecture handouts. However, I have some problems setting u...
[ 0.0128173828125, 0.032958984375, 0.003326416015625, 0.014892578125, -0.01025390625, -0.01165771484375, 0.0120849609375, -0.0159912109375, -0.00469970703125, -0.007598876953125, 0.00994873046875, -0.0126953125, -0.0031585693359375, -0.0184326171875, -0.008544921875, -0.0162353515625, ...
[ 11249, 47, 5423, 1257, 78999, 34702, 282, 100, 2289, 34479, 23, 116890, 3217, 963, 400, 7008, 11508, 6077, 491, 7560, 150370, 198996, 11301, 15970, 4313, 1459, 1202, 59619, 44402, 53550, 2921, 45226, 98169, 24365, 20600, 25452, 12549, 44691, ...
[ 0.07476806640625, 0.040069580078125, 0.151123046875, 0.1422119140625, 0.288330078125, 0.2578125, 0.2216796875, 0.07366943359375, 0.1678466796875, 0.247802734375, 0.045257568359375, 0.21484375, 0.1959228515625, 0.2115478515625, 0.03887939453125, 0.11279296875, 0.06787109375, 0.07812...
embed
62150288_c1
62150288
lisp
1
(fast-star a b) (cond ((or (= b 0) (= a 0)) 0) ((even? a) (fast-star (/ a 2) (* 2 b))) (else (+ a (fast-star a (- b 1)))))) And the same thing in iterative form (i.e. O(1) space): (note how + a on line 4 above just moves to the accumulator, end of line 6 below, to get this in tail position) (define (fast-star b) (fast...
(fast-star a b) (cond ((or (= b 0) (= a 0)) 0) ((even? a) (fast-star (/ a 2) (* 2 b))) (else (+ a (fast-star a (- b 1)))))) And the same thing in iterative form (i.e. O(1) space): (note how + a on line 4 above just moves to the accumulator, end of line 6 below, to get this in tail position) (define (fast-star b) (fast...
[ 0.00445556640625, 0.00860595703125, 0.020263671875, -0.0106201171875, -0.0028533935546875, 0.00885009765625, -0.00909423828125, -0.01312255859375, -0.004119873046875, -0.00110626220703125, 0.0177001953125, 0.01470947265625, -0.007537841796875, -0.0101318359375, -0.0074462890625, -0.021...
[ 39473, 5613, 10, 876, 16, 2271, 71, 60494, 748, 757, 26301, 64, 4958, 116, 15, 5557, 22183, 9, 106, 167089, 5701, 13580, 23, 17, 720, 45023, 3173, 5, 13, 180, 27750, 32628, 48345, 997, 13315, 201, 36917, 1660, 25813, 7, 70, 183278, ...
[ 0.1588134765625, 0.1929931640625, 0.0948486328125, 0.1719970703125, 0.002227783203125, 0.050750732421875, 0.05731201171875, 0.00701904296875, 0.056182861328125, 0.125244140625, 0.04913330078125, 0.043548583984375, 0.05548095703125, 0.04705810546875, 0.0029296875, 0.03289794921875, 0....
embed
14626364_c0
14626364
lisp
0
Title: Evaluate sexp and display output in new buffer in grep-mode Problem title: Evaluate sexp and display output in new buffer in grep-mode Tags: emacs, lisp Problem: Evaluate sexp and display output in new buffer in grep-mode Following this recipe , I have prepared this search command: (shell-command "grep . /tmp/li...
Evaluate sexp and display output in new buffer in grep-mode Evaluate sexp and display output in new buffer in grep-mode emacs lisp Evaluate Evaluate sexp and display output in new buffer in grep-mode Following this recipe , I have prepared this search command: And if I run this with eval-last-sexp ( ^ + x + e ), a list...
[ -0.0101318359375, 0.01708984375, -0.0087890625, 0.00341796875, -0.01806640625, 0.04052734375, 0.010498046875, -0.003143310546875, 0.01611328125, -0.0162353515625, -0.0015411376953125, 0.017333984375, 0.0113525390625, 0.0001964569091796875, 0.00119781494140625, -0.006561279296875, -0....
[ 151228, 67, 1100, 254, 44116, 140992, 3525, 373, 18234, 3514, 61170, 352, 2263, 400, 7008, 48564, 133888, 33938, 75101, 11675, 28, 1405, 19777, 83613, 13331, 997, 1022, 5303, 14858, 108975, 7103, 9384, 125296, 959, 23, 88203, 191082, 47, 10...
[ 0.2249755859375, 0.06158447265625, 0.1470947265625, 0.170654296875, 0.1453857421875, 0.2017822265625, 0.099853515625, 0.07470703125, 0.1898193359375, 0.161376953125, 0.1259765625, 0.053131103515625, 0.102294921875, 0.109619140625, 0.17578125, 0.07421875, 0.0889892578125, 0.16259765...
embed
26703799_c0
26703799
lisp
0
Title: LISP program not small tweaks needed. Problem title: LISP program not small tweaks needed. Tags: lisp, null, cons, symbols Problem: LISP program not small tweaks needed. The Program is supposed to find each symbol in the List, that comes after a certain symbol. The function gets to parameters passed in. A List w...
LISP program not small tweaks needed. LISP program not small tweaks needed. lisp null cons symbols LISP LISP program not small tweaks needed. The Program is supposed to find each symbol in the List, that comes after a certain symbol. The function gets to parameters passed in. A List which could contain nested-lists and...
[ -0.003662109375, 0.0234375, 0.00518798828125, 0.02734375, -0.01007080078125, 0.025634765625, -0.0247802734375, 0.0048828125, -0.0034027099609375, -0.0064697265625, 0.016845703125, -0.0211181640625, 0.00567626953125, 0.00390625, 0.01190185546875, 0.0238037109375, 0.01531982421875, 0...
[ 16970, 9434, 1528, 959, 19336, 77488, 13, 24251, 44841, 400, 7008, 56574, 158, 7, 26582, 7663, 134598, 7413, 12638, 23, 32036, 32497, 7103, 32354, 62163, 171859, 115081, 5809, 8512, 6562, 44954, 882, 5303, 33938, 28412, 1380, 89536, 2646, 2...
[ 0.178955078125, 0.2403564453125, 0.16650390625, 0.063720703125, 0.08709716796875, 0.045562744140625, 0.0210723876953125, 0.0106201171875, 0.1019287109375, 0.1585693359375, 0.21923828125, 0.1719970703125, 0.1767578125, 0.060211181640625, 0.2071533203125, 0.171875, 0.09564208984375, ...
embed
62249652_c1
62249652
lisp
1
list2) (if (null? list1) list2 (cons (car list1) (append (cdr list1) list2)))) From the definition, the order of growth in the number of steps grows as theta(l1) where l1 is the number of elements in the first list. If two lists has the same length, then the order of growth grows as theta(n/2) where n is the sum of th...
list2) (if (null? list1) list2 (cons (car list1) (append (cdr list1) list2)))) From the definition, the order of growth in the number of steps grows as theta(l1) where l1 is the number of elements in the first list. If two lists has the same length, then the order of growth grows as theta(n/2) where n is the sum of th...
[ -0.006500244140625, 0.016845703125, -0.01043701171875, -0.0035400390625, 0.007293701171875, 0.00927734375, -0.0220947265625, 0.00189208984375, 0.01708984375, -0.0289306640625, 0.007537841796875, -0.039794921875, -0.00347900390625, 0.0052490234375, 0.0016326904296875, -0.0040283203125, ...
[ 5303, 10461, 3190, 139550, 17727, 304, 25553, 3284, 9007, 3611, 7569, 80126, 80934, 12989, 111, 75678, 23, 14012, 98441, 55993, 7, 237, 70, 102, 141, 96, 418, 80854, 5117, 6626, 5701, 140909, 19, 12477, 653, 10554, 15044, 9790, 74481, 532...
[ 0.2548828125, 0.1849365234375, 0.1170654296875, 0.166259765625, 0.130615234375, 0.10736083984375, 0.1488037109375, 0.145751953125, 0.096923828125, 0.1654052734375, 0.1121826171875, 0.034332275390625, 0.1456298828125, 0.226318359375, 0.130126953125, 0.222412109375, 0.0160369873046875,...
embed
27725294_c0
27725294
lisp
0
Title: Argument to lisp function changed despite creating a copy Problem title: Argument to lisp function changed despite creating a copy Tags: lisp, common-lisp Problem: Argument to lisp function changed despite creating a copy I have created a function to randomly select a 'bit' out of a nested list, e.g., ((1 0 0 1)...
Argument to lisp function changed despite creating a copy Argument to lisp function changed despite creating a copy lisp common-lisp Argument DNA-seq CDNA-seq Argument to lisp function changed despite creating a copy I have created a function to randomly select a 'bit' out of a nested list, e.g., ((1 0 0 1) (1 1 1 1) (...
[ 0.0035400390625, 0.0303955078125, 0.0054931640625, 0.00823974609375, 0.0103759765625, 0.011474609375, -0.0064697265625, -0.0081787109375, 0.0020294189453125, -0.00714111328125, -0.00189971923828125, 0.0130615234375, 0.01171875, 0.0224609375, 0.0213623046875, -0.0126953125, 0.00372314...
[ 112140, 47, 400, 7008, 32354, 98816, 61518, 105233, 43658, 39210, 4086, 254, 27583, 184, 864, 125903, 75935, 96759, 36849, 3137, 1810, 8512, 5303, 757, 4879, 2858, 106, 22085, 147505, 1632, 3249, 45234, 22925, 105274, 43240, 5299, 134053, 311...
[ 0.293701171875, 0.1019287109375, 0.1412353515625, 0.222412109375, 0.20751953125, 0.19677734375, 0.12353515625, 0.1533203125, 0.2093505859375, 0.0728759765625, 0.1278076171875, 0.1474609375, 0.1595458984375, 0.1085205078125, 0.1905517578125, 0.20361328125, 0.1468505859375, 0.1461181...
embed
39069679_c1
39069679
lisp
1
At this point M-x run-scheme returns: /usr/local/Cellar/emacs/24.5/Emacs.app/Contents/MacOS/Emacs:/usr/bin/scheme: Exec format error Process scheme exited abnormally with code 126 The symlink file looked very out of place in the bin folder so not knowing what else to try I removed the symlink and instead created an ac...
At this point M-x run-scheme returns: /usr/local/Cellar/emacs/24.5/Emacs.app/Contents/MacOS/Emacs:/usr/bin/scheme: Exec format error Process scheme exited abnormally with code 126 The symlink file looked very out of place in the bin folder so not knowing what else to try I removed the symlink and instead created an ac...
[ 0.00154876708984375, 0.0047607421875, -0.0189208984375, 0.0162353515625, -0.01202392578125, 0.03076171875, 0.006256103515625, -0.00909423828125, -0.0152587890625, -0.0162353515625, 0.007293701171875, 0.00823974609375, -0.01324462890625, -0.0079345703125, -0.0024261474609375, -0.0157470...
[ 276, 9, 425, 11675, 7560, 282, 30646, 223, 98908, 159360, 320, 11883, 4439, 104867, 647, 35572, 9007, 25352, 55450, 7285, 7568, 5443, 3240, 9384, 18499, 123996, 150370, 82230, 1563, 33176, 18151, 49988, 954, 39, 10187, 11435, 54811, 4552, 1...
[ 0.1485595703125, 0.11865234375, 0.2176513671875, 0.182373046875, 0.2003173828125, 0.189453125, 0.1181640625, 0.051666259765625, 0.0211029052734375, 0.07568359375, 0.158935546875, 0.080078125, 0.146484375, 0.153076171875, 0.025177001953125, 0.1282958984375, 0.125244140625, 0.1175537...
embed
13610130_c0
13610130
lisp
0
Title: How to make elements of several lists into one in lisp Problem title: How to make elements of several lists into one in lisp Tags: list, lisp, append Problem: How to make elements of several lists into one in lisp I'm trying to take a list of lists of lists (don't worry, I'll put an example) and convert the elem...
How to make elements of several lists into one in lisp How to make elements of several lists into one in lisp list lisp append How list_elements t121 t122 t123 t124 t132 t133 t134 How to make elements of several lists into one in lisp I'm trying to take a list of lists of lists (don't worry, I'll put an example) and co...
[ -0.00848388671875, 0.0238037109375, -0.004119873046875, -0.004791259765625, 0.0042724609375, 0.0220947265625, -0.0093994140625, 0.004791259765625, 0.00927734375, -0.0269775390625, -0.001068115234375, -0.01513671875, 0.0019378662109375, 0.0196533203125, -0.0244140625, -0.006683349609375...
[ 11249, 47, 3249, 80854, 111, 40368, 5303, 7, 3934, 1632, 23, 400, 7008, 114689, 71, 62766, 808, 129697, 108837, 48636, 109589, 136124, 125158, 114082, 31577, 5646, 27781, 96760, 12638, 4568, 19713, 2060, 89536, 134598, 30646, 483, 384, 209, ...
[ 0.0789794921875, 0.006866455078125, 0.1339111328125, 0.2117919921875, 0.0802001953125, 0.2086181640625, 0.255615234375, 0.1058349609375, 0.1995849609375, 0.2047119140625, 0.09503173828125, 0.1622314453125, 0.24462890625, 0.14892578125, 0.1082763671875, 0.20654296875, 0.03451538085937...
embed
58774948_c0
58774948
lisp
0
Title: How can I make my average function tail recursive in Lisp Problem title: How can I make my average function tail recursive in Lisp Tags: tail-recursion, common-lisp, recursion, lisp Problem: How can I make my average function tail recursive in Lisp I am simply trying to make this average function to be tail recu...
How can I make my average function tail recursive in Lisp How can I make my average function tail recursive in Lisp tail-recursion common-lisp recursion lisp How Lisp How can I make my average function tail recursive in Lisp I am simply trying to make this average function to be tail recursive. I have managed to get my...
[ 0.01165771484375, 0.02490234375, 0.01080322265625, 0.0159912109375, -0.0157470703125, 0.0174560546875, -0.00084686279296875, -0.0067138671875, 0.01336669921875, -0.0164794921875, 0.01031494140625, -0.027587890625, 0.007171630859375, 0.00604248046875, 0.017822265625, 0.01171875, 0.013...
[ 11249, 831, 3249, 759, 83080, 32354, 46741, 195625, 5844, 23, 1261, 7008, 107, 48650, 1830, 39210, 4086, 254, 400, 31577, 186, 145755, 4488, 150675, 71834, 16030, 64561, 185, 177, 959, 27489, 26785, 140992, 5303, 1632, 12830, 75169, 18151, ...
[ 0.0748291015625, 0.07867431640625, 0.0997314453125, 0.047698974609375, 0.228271484375, 0.19873046875, 0.290771484375, 0.2305908203125, 0.1573486328125, 0.057769775390625, 0.147216796875, 0.2183837890625, 0.04425048828125, 0.1634521484375, 0.028472900390625, 0.0906982421875, 0.0846557...
embed
74912338_c0
74912338
lisp
0
Title: What is atom in LISP? Problem title: What is atom in LISP? Tags: lisp, common-lisp Problem: What is atom in LISP? I would like to have a clear understanding, what is 'Atom' in LISP? Due to lispworks, 'atom - any object that is not a cons.'. But this definition is not enough clear for me. For example, in the code...
What is atom in LISP? What is atom in LISP? lisp common-lisp What LISP NIL What is atom in LISP? I would like to have a clear understanding, what is 'Atom' in LISP? Due to lispworks, 'atom - any object that is not a cons.'. But this definition is not enough clear for me. For example, in the code below: Is 'L' an atom? ...
[ 0.0031890869140625, 0.0089111328125, 0.01202392578125, 0.00439453125, -0.00750732421875, 0.021484375, 0.0078125, 0.0078125, -0.018310546875, -0.0087890625, 0.01373291015625, -0.009521484375, 0.0004367828369140625, 0.0009613037109375, 0.0034637451171875, 0.005645751953125, 0.005340576...
[ 4865, 83, 34627, 23, 16970, 9434, 32, 400, 7008, 39210, 4086, 254, 541, 16444, 1884, 34735, 100094, 2367, 12078, 25, 18244, 11, 5928, 20, 2499, 36746, 450, 959, 10, 158, 7, 80934, 18151, 35064, 2071, 866, 142, 339, 5303, 56661, 137272, ...
[ 0.09375, 0.113525390625, 0.285400390625, 0.1319580078125, 0.169677734375, 0.2259521484375, 0.0162353515625, 0.141845703125, 0.1954345703125, 0.0989990234375, 0.125244140625, 0.1700439453125, 0.061798095703125, 0.117431640625, 0.01177978515625, 0.062744140625, 0.072509765625, 0.0860...
embed
4436351_c0
4436351
lisp
0
Title: scheme for object-oriented programmers Problem title: scheme for object-oriented programmers Tags: oop, lisp, scheme, idioms, functional-programming Problem: scheme for object-oriented programmers I'm thoroughly intrigued by Scheme, and have started with some toy programming examples, and am reading through Paul...
scheme for object-oriented programmers scheme for object-oriented programmers oop lisp scheme idioms functional-programming scheme for object-oriented programmers I'm thoroughly intrigued by Scheme, and have started with some toy programming examples, and am reading through Paul Graham's On Lisp . One thing I haven't b...
[ 0.0169677734375, 0.01904296875, -0.0074462890625, 0.005035400390625, -0.01348876953125, 0.00531005859375, 0.00145721435546875, 0.00811767578125, 0.01446533203125, -0.055908203125, 0.015869140625, -0.02685546875, -0.003631591796875, -0.01312255859375, -0.0035247802734375, -0.02490234375...
[ 150370, 100, 36746, 49133, 77848, 32500, 400, 7008, 13373, 28016, 123309, 28966, 209183, 241522, 34702, 282, 72713, 56037, 449, 27781, 16454, 8305, 10208, 147756, 7, 2161, 1261, 38246, 7413, 12877, 707, 4165, 179140, 94957, 47, 30563, 3395, 1...
[ 0.259521484375, 0.07061767578125, 0.22265625, 0.178466796875, 0.1768798828125, 0.17431640625, 0.1090087890625, 0.196044921875, 0.1160888671875, 0.022857666015625, 0.1256103515625, 0.1422119140625, 0.0259857177734375, 0.0906982421875, 0.251708984375, 0.248046875, 0.1810302734375, 0....
embed
13531362_c1
13531362
lisp
1
) "Return a new lexical environment for a lambda expression FORM." ;; See if this is a closure or not (let ((args (byte-compile-arglist-vars (cadr form)))) (let ((lexenv nil)) ;; Fill in the initial stack contents (let ((stackpos 0)) ;; Add entries for each argument (dolist (arg args) (push (cons arg stackpos) lexenv) ...
) "Return a new lexical environment for a lambda expression FORM." ;; See if this is a closure or not (let ((args (byte-compile-arglist-vars (cadr form)))) (let ((lexenv nil)) ;; Fill in the initial stack contents (let ((stackpos 0)) ;; Add entries for each argument (dolist (arg args) (push (cons arg stackpos) lexenv) ...
[ 0.0032196044921875, -0.0048828125, -0.023193359375, 0.005523681640625, -0.00885009765625, 0.04931640625, 0.02392578125, 0.01226806640625, 0.01177978515625, 0.0098876953125, 0.0016937255859375, 0.00555419921875, 0.0028533935546875, -0.001495361328125, 0.011962890625, -0.00787353515625, ...
[ 1388, 4332, 987, 19, 3525, 75675, 21533, 65998, 21, 6492, 85, 125195, 98533, 6872, 2174, 83, 170224, 959, 61477, 61028, 58875, 1340, 6562, 1961, 42, 3173, 74070, 33, 334, 17324, 140423, 61475, 177261, 10941, 7522, 757, 29117, 112820, 10750,...
[ 0.004364013671875, 0.07574462890625, 0.1566162109375, 0.07354736328125, 0.1275634765625, 0.163818359375, 0.13818359375, 0.282958984375, 0.05322265625, 0.1790771484375, 0.09075927734375, 0.2242431640625, 0.27587890625, 0.1407470703125, 0.0221405029296875, 0.00799560546875, 0.234619140...
embed
35539178_c1
35539178
lisp
1
" #<SQLITE3-DATABASE C:/users/user/test.sqlite OPEN #xCDC1B7E> :AUTO T) 3: (CCL::%%STANDARD-COMBINED-METHOD-DCODE ((#<STANDARD-METHOD CLSQL-SYS:DATABASE-QUERY :BEFORE (T CLSQL-SYS:DATABASE T T)>) NIL ..) 16705134) ... My Emacs .init.el is configured to use UTF-8: (set-language-environment "utf-8") (setq inferior-lisp-p...
" #<SQLITE3-DATABASE C:/users/user/test.sqlite OPEN #xCDC1B7E> :AUTO T) 3: (CCL::%%STANDARD-COMBINED-METHOD-DCODE ((#<STANDARD-METHOD CLSQL-SYS:DATABASE-QUERY :BEFORE (T CLSQL-SYS:DATABASE T T)>) NIL ..) 16705134) ... My Emacs .init.el is configured to use UTF-8: (set-language-environment "utf-8") (setq inferior-lisp-p...
[ 0.0220947265625, 0.023193359375, 0.00994873046875, 0.0004405975341796875, -0.0133056640625, -0.0086669921875, -0.000667572021484375, -0.0137939453125, 0, 0.004852294921875, -0.01031494140625, -0.0238037109375, -0.01708984375, -0.00151824951171875, -0.0260009765625, -0.00537109375, -0...
[ 158897, 25216, 27495, 87845, 49068, 223, 65918, 6954, 95255, 67, 180, 65441, 117772, 384, 22408, 13709, 866, 75700, 397, 49444, 16113, 119603, 33677, 193792, 9688, 46323, 26947, 53966, 61692, 541, 16444, 611, 177055, 114082, 85269, 4439, 73, ...
[ 0.1790771484375, 0.2181396484375, 0.14599609375, 0.030609130859375, 0.1348876953125, 0.06402587890625, 0.06646728515625, 0.1488037109375, 0.238525390625, 0.2314453125, 0.050537109375, 0.1380615234375, 0.0595703125, 0.0159912109375, 0.04736328125, 0.02203369140625, 0.1177978515625, ...
embed
40749280_c1
40749280
lisp
1
: pair? given: () The part that confuses me is that when I simulate running through the 1st iteration of the recursion and get the values the function should have, I get correct values: ;first loop through function (car (car scores)) ; 5 (cadr (car scores)) ; 5 (cddr (car scores)) ; 3 ;second loop (1st recursive call) ...
: pair? given: () The part that confuses me is that when I simulate running through the 1st iteration of the recursion and get the values the function should have, I get correct values: ;first loop through function (car (car scores)) ; 5 (cadr (car scores)) ; 5 (cddr (car scores)) ; 3 ;second loop (1st recursive call) ...
[ -0.0137939453125, 0.0133056640625, -0.0150146484375, 0.007415771484375, 0.01153564453125, -0.0038299560546875, 0.00604248046875, 0.000701904296875, 0.013671875, 0.00830078125, 0.0203857421875, 0.0106201171875, -0.0010986328125, -0.003387451171875, 0.0234375, -0.00836181640625, 0.0138...
[ 152, 80836, 32, 34475, 2831, 55681, 5908, 163, 40226, 67, 51042, 8305, 106, 271, 720, 2320, 195625, 1830, 2046, 142424, 32354, 5608, 765, 26785, 13448, 40956, 3284, 47763, 190, 25426, 42, 71574, 7569, 138, 191633, 11782, 305, 116, 28219, ...
[ 0.048583984375, 0.2724609375, 0.041351318359375, 0.1160888671875, 0.0275421142578125, 0.11962890625, 0.0771484375, 0.00885009765625, 0.2265625, 0.0377197265625, 0.103271484375, 0.1278076171875, 0.040130615234375, 0.061065673828125, 0.1593017578125, 0.00616455078125, 0.2362060546875, ...
embed
12496482_c0
12496482
lisp
0
Title: Scheme: Procedures that return another inner procedure Problem title: Scheme: Procedures that return another inner procedure Tags: lisp, scheme, sicp, functional-programming Problem: Scheme: Procedures that return another inner procedure This is from the SICP book that I am sure many of you are familiar with. Th...
Scheme: Procedures that return another inner procedure Scheme: Procedures that return another inner procedure lisp scheme sicp functional-programming Scheme Procedures Argument CONS Scheme: Procedures that return another inner procedure This is from the SICP book that I am sure many of you are familiar with. This is an...
[ 0.006744384765625, 0.043212890625, -0.01153564453125, 0.00885009765625, -0.00592041015625, 0.00139617919921875, -0.0016326904296875, 0.0007781982421875, 0.0032806396484375, -0.02294921875, 0.008056640625, 0.0048828125, 0.00164031982421875, -0.003509521484375, 0.0206298828125, -0.001983...
[ 34702, 282, 170470, 30646, 15700, 75414, 50491, 90, 7008, 150370, 26536, 254, 123309, 28966, 112140, 109022, 198993, 12877, 16031, 27781, 12319, 5526, 23755, 10336, 28219, 2258, 136, 56329, 42, 61924, 28032, 70820, 158, 7, 22288, 10750, 97, 4...
[ 0.2169189453125, 0.1109619140625, 0.2032470703125, 0.196533203125, 0.09283447265625, 0.187744140625, 0.2156982421875, 0.04107666015625, 0.107666015625, 0.162109375, 0.031005859375, 0.09326171875, 0.045318603515625, 0.0584716796875, 0.22900390625, 0.1951904296875, 0.1748046875, 0.05...
embed
30625985_c0
30625985
lisp
0
Title: Printing ith row jth column value in lisp Problem title: Printing ith row jth column value in lisp Tags: multidimensional-array, lisp, arrays, clisp Problem: Printing ith row jth column value in lisp I am taking input N as number of rows of a 2D matrix in lisp, where each row can have maximum of 5 elements in it...
Printing ith row jth column value in lisp Printing ith row jth column value in lisp multidimensional-array lisp arrays clisp Printing N:initial-element Item Printing ith row jth column value in lisp I am taking input N as number of rows of a 2D matrix in lisp, where each row can have maximum of 5 elements in it. So i m...
[ -0.0247802734375, -0.00469970703125, 0.027587890625, 0.0048828125, -0.0140380859375, -0.005615234375, 0.02978515625, 0.015625, 0.000850677490234375, -0.001556396484375, 0.0274658203125, -0.04248046875, -0.0166015625, -0.022705078125, -0.02490234375, -0.005401611328125, 0.013061523437...
[ 39754, 214, 8962, 15555, 1647, 927, 3365, 316, 34292, 23, 400, 7008, 19, 6024, 157955, 19305, 10298, 95701, 541, 118, 62766, 78426, 35971, 107730, 237, 116, 397, 50944, 425, 12638, 831, 38132, 190, 80854, 3249, 2499, 757, 1892, 1081, 1084...
[ 0.2059326171875, 0.0103759765625, 0.21484375, 0.22265625, 0.138427734375, 0.2110595703125, 0.12451171875, 0.146728515625, 0.176513671875, 0.0272216796875, 0.1171875, 0.2081298828125, 0.01251220703125, 0.009185791015625, 0.0887451171875, 0.06121826171875, 0.0902099609375, 0.01705932...
embed
6952369_c0
6952369
lisp
0
Title: Java-Mode Argument Indenting in Emacs Problem title: Java-Mode Argument Indenting in Emacs Tags: lisp, emacs, java Problem: Java-Mode Argument Indenting in Emacs My java-mode in emacs wants to indent function arguments like this: someLongFunctionName( argumentNumberOne, argumentNumberTwo, argumentNumberThree, ar...
Java-Mode Argument Indenting in Emacs Java-Mode Argument Indenting in Emacs lisp emacs java Java-Mode Argument Indenting Emacs Java-Mode Argument Indenting in Emacs My java-mode in emacs wants to indent function arguments like this: There are two problems here. Firstly, it wants to line up the start of the arguments wi...
[ 0.019287109375, -0.0002288818359375, -0.01214599609375, 0.0005340576171875, -0.00213623046875, 0.039794921875, -0.0189208984375, 0.0198974609375, -0.01190185546875, -0.00238037109375, 0.01409912109375, -0.023193359375, -0.03125, 0.0211181640625, 0.01287841796875, -0.0223388671875, 0....
[ 41925, 9083, 112, 112140, 360, 555, 1916, 23, 85269, 4439, 400, 7008, 352, 2263, 79, 330, 61170, 7, 86171, 18597, 18, 32354, 10750, 1884, 903, 6626, 44402, 3688, 13315, 1257, 4034, 678, 3564, 9351, 85689, 70, 20903, 366, 33, 237, 2174, ...
[ 0.2283935546875, 0.165771484375, 0.06103515625, 0.253662109375, 0.0841064453125, 0.1905517578125, 0.0965576171875, 0.051025390625, 0.1925048828125, 0.2008056640625, 0.0748291015625, 0.1595458984375, 0.127685546875, 0.1663818359375, 0.1192626953125, 0.2005615234375, 0.19921875, 0.15...
embed
35107735_c0
35107735
lisp
0
Title: Pass abstract/null variables into functions Clojure Problem title: Pass abstract/null variables into functions Clojure Tags: clojure-java-interop, clojure, clojurescript, lisp Problem: Pass abstract/null variables into functions Clojure I have a function that i need to take in a word and im trying to make a vari...
Pass abstract/null variables into functions Clojure Pass abstract/null variables into functions Clojure clojure-java-interop clojure clojurescript lisp CompilerException java.lang.RuntimeException Pass Clojure FouR Rheet transform2 Unable NO_SOURCE_PATH:108:1 Pass abstract/null variables into functions Clojure I have a...
[ 0.01373291015625, 0.00604248046875, 0.00469970703125, -0.0218505859375, 0.001251220703125, 0.0159912109375, 0.01043701171875, -0.013916015625, 0.000965118408203125, 0.01434326171875, 0.0093994140625, 0.006866455078125, 0.00049591064453125, 0.006744384765625, -0.00262451171875, -0.00558...
[ 28872, 164789, 139550, 77336, 3934, 32354, 51053, 461, 107, 20450, 24071, 10433, 2146, 32032, 400, 7008, 15612, 34759, 63928, 79, 330, 3066, 163321, 6032, 19279, 1052, 80658, 126, 27198, 304, 2886, 9520, 76234, 65135, 69139, 19721, 3871, 5646...
[ 0.1357421875, 0.238037109375, 0.2069091796875, 0.257080078125, 0.1600341796875, 0.2164306640625, 0.1448974609375, 0.1541748046875, 0.1268310546875, 0.1114501953125, 0.1683349609375, 0.07470703125, 0.1669921875, 0.083251953125, 0.0247955322265625, 0.12060546875, 0.0638427734375, 0.1...
embed
33462610_c0
33462610
lisp
0
Title: How do recursive functions work in Lisp? Problem title: How do recursive functions work in Lisp? Tags: common-lisp, recursion, lisp Problem: How do recursive functions work in Lisp? So I'm coding in Lisp and I came up with a function that counts the number of atoms in a list (with no sub-lists). so the code is t...
How do recursive functions work in Lisp? How do recursive functions work in Lisp? common-lisp recursion lisp How Lisp How do recursive functions work in Lisp? So I'm coding in Lisp and I came up with a function that counts the number of atoms in a list (with no sub-lists). so the code is this: and this works and makes ...
[ 0.007049560546875, 0.01904296875, 0.015380859375, 0.0245361328125, -0.00118255615234375, 0.021240234375, -0.00494384765625, 0.00726318359375, -0.006744384765625, -0.0279541015625, -0.0087890625, -0.020263671875, -0.0027008056640625, -0.000659942626953125, 0.0186767578125, 0.00628662109...
[ 11249, 54, 195625, 5844, 32354, 7, 4488, 23, 1261, 7008, 39210, 4086, 254, 1830, 400, 552, 6238, 1257, 54529, 14012, 34627, 5303, 76228, 110, 1614, 6562, 18151, 903, 43240, 30482, 10422, 163, 11782, 678, 2858, 116, 8439, 10750, 738, 28960...
[ 0.08160400390625, 0.0282135009765625, 0.2265625, 0.179931640625, 0.1932373046875, 0.06463623046875, 0.1602783203125, 0.06475830078125, 0.1446533203125, 0.2301025390625, 0.07666015625, 0.0848388671875, 0.1519775390625, 0.0570068359375, 0.0919189453125, 0.101318359375, 0.02946472167968...
embed
54384930_c0
54384930
lisp
0
Title: How to refresh, remake, lexical bindings on a lambda? Problem title: How to refresh, remake, lexical bindings on a lambda? Tags: scheme, racket, lisp, binding Problem: How to refresh, remake, lexical bindings on a lambda? I am trying to see how to rebind a lexical binding, or redefine the closure of a lambda. Th...
How to refresh, remake, lexical bindings on a lambda? How to refresh, remake, lexical bindings on a lambda? scheme racket lisp binding How main.rkt ad_lib How to refresh, remake, lexical bindings on a lambda? I am trying to see how to rebind a lexical binding, or redefine the closure of a lambda. The expected usage of ...
[ -0.00958251953125, 0.0306396484375, 0.006378173828125, 0.0002689361572265625, 0.01171875, 0.005157470703125, 0.0081787109375, 0.01300048828125, 0.0166015625, -0.029296875, -0.007659912109375, -0.0218505859375, -0.0167236328125, 0.0031585693359375, 0.0303955078125, 0.00872802734375, -...
[ 11249, 47, 210651, 456, 55898, 75675, 21533, 128239, 7, 98, 21, 6492, 85, 150370, 673, 27853, 400, 7008, 5201, 7190, 18, 606, 5612, 3642, 89817, 15265, 64552, 170224, 84751, 127689, 11737, 157, 309, 11782, 237, 5941, 20028, 104851, 110, 1...
[ 0.0797119140625, 0.0679931640625, 0.2498779296875, 0.1258544921875, 0.1693115234375, 0.1326904296875, 0.1630859375, 0.239013671875, 0.09234619140625, 0.04803466796875, 0.0518798828125, 0.1673583984375, 0.154296875, 0.1292724609375, 0.043182373046875, 0.1702880859375, 0.06536865234375...
embed
66620802_c0
66620802
lisp
0
Title: How to fix a stack overflow error in Lisp Problem title: How to fix a stack overflow error in Lisp Tags: common-lisp, lisp, functional-programming, clisp Problem: How to fix a stack overflow error in Lisp I have a code here that is trying to get the sum of all prime numbers below a given number. When I run it, I...
How to fix a stack overflow error in Lisp How to fix a stack overflow error in Lisp common-lisp lisp functional-programming clisp How Lisp Enter How to fix a stack overflow error in Lisp I have a code here that is trying to get the sum of all prime numbers below a given number. When I run it, I keep on getting a stack ...
[ -0.01318359375, 0.0220947265625, 0.0152587890625, 0.01507568359375, -0.003082275390625, 0.00921630859375, -0.006866455078125, 0.0036468505859375, -0.0025177001953125, -0.021240234375, 0.0169677734375, -0.014404296875, -0.007598876953125, -0.0166015625, 0.04443359375, 0.015869140625, ...
[ 11249, 47, 30022, 177261, 645, 118664, 18499, 23, 1261, 7008, 10, 39210, 4086, 254, 400, 123309, 28966, 95701, 60816, 18151, 31577, 2046, 10554, 756, 20809, 101935, 35064, 34475, 14012, 11675, 13695, 33720, 1286, 7413, 23409, 44691 ]
[ 0.021148681640625, 0.036834716796875, 0.1611328125, 0.17529296875, 0.145751953125, 0.27099609375, 0.2073974609375, 0.059417724609375, 0.1534423828125, 0.2396240234375, 0.037994384765625, 0.06817626953125, 0.088623046875, 0.15478515625, 0.10870361328125, 0.1011962890625, 0.04299926757...
embed
4034042_c0
4034042
lisp
0
Title: (Random) in Common Lisp Not So Random? Problem title: (Random) in Common Lisp Not So Random? Tags: random, common-lisp, lisp, sbcl Problem: (Random) in Common Lisp Not So Random? Okay, final question and I'll have finished my number guessing game in Common Lisp! :D Whenever the game starts (or a new game begins ...
(Random) in Common Lisp Not So Random? (Random) in Common Lisp Not So Random? random common-lisp lisp sbcl 1 Random Common Lisp Not Play Reset Set Add (Random) in Common Lisp Not So Random? Okay, final question and I'll have finished my number guessing game in Common Lisp! :D Whenever the game starts (or a new game beg...
[ -0.01458740234375, 0.01226806640625, 0.0152587890625, -0.00830078125, 0.0108642578125, 0.0294189453125, -0.006866455078125, -0.01708984375, 0.001312255859375, -0.0167236328125, -0.0037689208984375, 0.01519775390625, -0.016357421875, 0.0205078125, 0.0203857421875, -0.00982666015625, -...
[ 126525, 3815, 23, 151301, 1261, 7008, 11205, 1061, 39643, 306, 32, 96759, 39210, 4086, 254, 400, 34937, 106, 11356, 9624, 126, 19943, 29117, 2704, 9655, 122799, 14012, 57767, 214, 6712, 38, 14847, 30441, 4034, 3525, 9842, 7103, 5117, 25632,...
[ 0.172119140625, 0.2061767578125, 0.09326171875, 0.2113037109375, 0.1846923828125, 0.2003173828125, 0.1717529296875, 0.142333984375, 0.1614990234375, 0.14599609375, 0.0078125, 0.224365234375, 0.1629638671875, 0.1400146484375, 0.150146484375, 0.1304931640625, 0.0755615234375, 0.01622...
embed
65455866_c1
65455866
lisp
1
this for my minimal Lisp interpreter; I have only implemented the most basic functions. This is what I wrote. I'm using la to accumulate the parts of the output. (defmacro xond (&rest x) (let ((la '())) (loop (if x (push (list 'if (pop x) (list 'return (pop x))) la) (progn (push 'nil la) (push 'block la) (return la) )...
this for my minimal Lisp interpreter; I have only implemented the most basic functions. This is what I wrote. I'm using la to accumulate the parts of the output. (defmacro xond (&rest x) (let ((la '())) (loop (if x (push (list 'if (pop x) (list 'return (pop x))) la) (progn (push 'nil la) (push 'block la) (return la) )...
[ -0.00872802734375, 0.0013275146484375, -0.000568389892578125, 0.004669189453125, 0.003082275390625, 0.0179443359375, 0.03564453125, 0.0069580078125, 0.0228271484375, -0.019775390625, 0.001190185546875, -0.00909423828125, 0.00433349609375, -0.00982666015625, 0.0038909912109375, 0.002349...
[ 903, 20187, 1261, 7008, 29481, 56, 29479, 62822, 32354, 54397, 17368, 21, 47, 183278, 67, 63920, 140992, 112, 420, 15322, 12865, 2208, 56644, 1022, 1974, 143, 28354, 3190, 7332, 6562, 33554, 65395, 75620, 17324, 81409, 83613, 2940, 71, 3509...
[ 0.0655517578125, 0.19775390625, 0.1396484375, 0.238525390625, 0.212158203125, 0.10205078125, 0.128662109375, 0.09423828125, 0.1448974609375, 0.0343017578125, 0.103271484375, 0.1824951171875, 0.0186920166015625, 0.1781005859375, 0.07769775390625, 0.1441650390625, 0.20068359375, 0.03...
embed
12242141_c0
12242141
lisp
0
Title: Lisp recursion with lists Problem title: Lisp recursion with lists Tags: common-lisp, lisp Problem: Lisp recursion with lists I need a function that will take in a list with words and split that list into two lists if at any point the word 'FOO' is found. I have come up with a recursive solution, may not be the ...
Lisp recursion with lists Lisp recursion with lists common-lisp lisp Lisp Splits FOO LOAD FILE split.lisp USAGE OUTPUT END Lisp recursion with lists I need a function that will take in a list with words and split that list into two lists if at any point the word 'FOO' is found. I have come up with a recursive solution,...
[ -0.017333984375, 0.0166015625, -0.01507568359375, 0.01007080078125, -0.0244140625, 0.0269775390625, 0.001556396484375, 0.01080322265625, 0.00830078125, 0.0198974609375, 0.0218505859375, -0.017822265625, -0.0162353515625, 0.000751495361328125, 0.00872802734375, 0.0184326171875, 0.0011...
[ 1261, 7008, 195625, 1830, 678, 5303, 39210, 4086, 254, 400, 46474, 563, 30563, 22215, 52099, 65450, 5, 4602, 52001, 39015, 7, 3871, 32354, 1221, 5646, 23, 34153, 136, 3934, 6626, 2174, 2499, 6275, 2565, 919, 14037, 5844, 29806, 2965, 6313...
[ 0.1624755859375, 0.2042236328125, 0.224609375, 0.0799560546875, 0.095703125, 0.2366943359375, 0.107177734375, 0.1143798828125, 0.1397705078125, 0.1138916015625, 0.17822265625, 0.0738525390625, 0.2203369140625, 0.1077880859375, 0.054443359375, 0.2030029296875, 0.002655029296875, 0.1...
embed
50712906_c1
50712906
lisp
1
idad 'a 'a) (primero-en-profundidad 'a 'k) Scheme code: #lang scheme (define vecinos '((a . (b c d)) (b . (a h)) (c . (a g)) (d . (g)) (g . (c d k)) (h . (b)) (g . (k)) ) ) (define (get-value X vecinos) (cond ((eq? (assoc X vecinos) #f) null) (#t (cdr (assq X vecinos)) ) )) And I think this is what is wrong because in ...
idad 'a 'a) (primero-en-profundidad 'a 'k) Scheme code: #lang scheme (define vecinos '((a . (b c d)) (b . (a h)) (c . (a g)) (d . (g)) (g . (c d k)) (h . (b)) (g . (k)) ) ) (define (get-value X vecinos) (cond ((eq? (assoc X vecinos) #f) null) (#t (cdr (assq X vecinos)) ) )) And I think this is what is wrong because in ...
[ -0.0115966796875, 0.028076171875, 0.0107421875, 0.03076171875, -0.01953125, -0.0147705078125, -0.0027008056640625, -0.0086669921875, 0.01104736328125, -0.028564453125, 0.01226806640625, 0.002685546875, -0.032470703125, -0.00139617919921875, 0.00185394287109375, 0.01513671875, 0.01257...
[ 3812, 11, 78667, 31, 33, 3454, 25018, 92, 34702, 282, 18151, 3066, 150370, 64552, 149873, 1096, 706, 472, 3794, 27494, 1193, 864, 73395, 56574, 7569, 5351, 44691, 23, 110, 87388, 3190, 11814, 80934, 1119, 118, 2285, 3355, 230346, 62346, 2...
[ 0.18994140625, 0.028350830078125, 0.121826171875, 0.0889892578125, 0.0809326171875, 0.047882080078125, 0.1640625, 0.0482177734375, 0.155517578125, 0.166748046875, 0.1646728515625, 0.129150390625, 0.2083740234375, 0.1202392578125, 0.2509765625, 0.0200347900390625, 0.062744140625, 0....
embed