CLISP

Section: User Commands (1)
Updated: 17 March 1993
Index Return to Main Contents
 

NAME

clisp - Common Lisp language interpreter and compiler  

SYNOPSIS

clisp [ -h ] [ -m memsize ] [ -s stacksize ] [ -M memfile ] [ -q ] [ -i initfile ... ] [ -c [ -l ] lispfile ... ] [ -x expression ]  

DESCRIPTION

Invokes the common lisp interpreter and compiler. Invoked without arguments, executes a read-eval-print loop, in which expressions are in turn read from standard input, evaluated by the lisp interpreter, and their results output to standard output. Invoked with -c, the specified lisp files are compiled to a bytecode that can be executed more efficiently.  

OPTIONS

-h
Displays a help message on how to use clisp.
-m memsize
Sets the amount of memory clisp tries to grab on startup. The amount may be given as nnnnnnn (measured in bytes), nnnnK or nnnnKB (measured in kilobytes) or nM or nMB (measured in megabytes). Default is 2 megabytes. The argument is constrained between 100 KB and 16 MB. -- This version of clisp allocates memory dynamically. memsize is essentially ignored.
-s stacksize
Sets the size of the stack clisp allocates for itself. The syntax is the same as for memsize. Default is one eighth of memsize. The argument is constrained between 40 KB and 8 MB.
-M memfile
Specifies the initial memory image. This must be a memory dump produced by the saveinitmem function.
-q
Quiet: clisp displays no banner at startup and no good-bye message when quitting.
-i initfile ...
Specifies initialization files to be loaded at startup. These should be lisp files (source or compiled).
-c lispfile ...
Compiles the specified lispfiles to bytecode. The compiled files can then be loaded instead of the sources to gain efficiency.
-l
A bytecode listing of the files being compiled will be produced. Useful only for debugging purposes.
-x expressions
Executes a series of arbitrary expressions instead of a read-eval-print loop. The values of the expressions will be output to standard output. Due to the argument processing done by the shell, the expressions must be enclosed in single quotes, and double quotes and backslashes must be preceded by backslashes.

 

WORKBENCH

Two kinds of tooltypes are supported:
WINDOW= windowspec
clisp will communicate with the console window or pipe specified by windowspec.
ARGS= arguments
Specifies the command line arguments for clisp. Within arguments the token `*' may be used to denote the project's filename. arguments defaults to `-i *' which means that the file will be loaded (see above).

 

REFERENCE

The language implemented conforms to

      Guy L. Steele Jr.: Common Lisp - The Language.
      Digital Press. 1st edition 1984, 465 pages.
      ("CLtL1" for short)
and to the older parts of

      Guy L. Steele Jr.: Common Lisp - The Language.
      Digital Press. 2nd edition 1990, 1032 pages.
      ("CLtL2" for short)
 

USE

help
to get some on-line help.
(apropos name)
lists the symbols relating to name.
(exit) or (quit) or (bye)
to quit clisp.
EOF (Ctrl-\)
to leave the current read-eval-print loop.
 

FILES

lisp.run
main executable
lispinit.mem
initial memory image
config.lsp
site-dependent configuration
*.lsp
lisp source
*.fas
lisp code, compiled by clisp
*.lib
lisp source library information, generated and used by the clisp compiler
 

ENVIRONMENT

 

SEE ALSO

cmulisp(1), emacs(1).  

BUGS

The function inspect is not implemented.

Only very few extensions from CLtL2 are supported.

No on-line documentation beyond apropos and describe is available.  

PROJECTS

Writing on-line documentation.

Building a foreign function interface (ability to call C code directly).

Write inspect.

Enhance the compiler such that it can inline local functions.

Specify a portable set of window and graphics operations.  

AUTHORS

Bruno Haible <haible@ma2s2.mathematik.uni-karlsruhe.de> and Michael Stoll.


 

Index

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
OPTIONS
WORKBENCH
REFERENCE
USE
FILES
ENVIRONMENT
SEE ALSO
BUGS
PROJECTS
AUTHORS

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Time: 17:17:38 GMT, February 06, 2023