Dear Raman,
> > FYI: I did some experiments for a minimal web server (loading the full
> > miniPicoLisp 'pil' environment plus "lib/http.l", "lib/xhtml.l" and
> > "lib/form.l"). It occupied about 500 kB. This was OK because we had a
> > limit of 1 MB.
>
> Wow! Fantastic!
>
> But just a question.
Dear Alex,
> FYI: I did some experiments for a minimal web server (loading the full
> miniPicoLisp 'pil' environment plus "lib/http.l", "lib/xhtml.l" and
> "lib/form.l"). It occupied about 500 kB. This was OK because we had a
> limit of 1 MB.
Wow! Fantastic!
But just a question. Since miniPicoLi
Oh boy! I've been thinking of something like this for a while.
What is the low-hanging fruit here, in the sense of, what applications might we
do faster/cheaper/better in hardware like this, than can be done otherwise?
The idea of pilog in hardware excites me too ... maybe time to go back and
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On Sun, Sep 21, 2014 at 08:15:52PM +0200, Tomas Hlavaty wrote:
> a good starting point is http://software-lab.de/doc/tut.html
or, perhaps more to Jerome's questions about differences to CL:
http://software-lab.de/doc/faq.html
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Hi Thorsten,
> Assuming PilMCU hardware exists and someone wants to use or program it, how
> would that look like? Where would one type the commands to manage the
> file system (whats the PilCMU terminal/console?), how would one interact
> with the PicoLisp REPL?
You saw the copy/pasted session i
Thanks to you Thorsten & Alex
I'll definitely have a closer look to the rosettacode.org website and read
online papers about PicoLisp design.
Thanks again
Regards
Jerome
On Sun, Sep 21, 2014 at 7:57 PM, Alexander Burger
wrote:
> On Sun, Sep 21, 2014 at 07:17:08PM +0200, jerome moliere wrote:
>
Hi Jerome
a good starting point is http://software-lab.de/doc/tut.html
Cheers,
Tomas
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Hi List,
this might not be a smart question, but anyway:
Assuming PilMCU hardware exists and someone wants to use or program it, how
would that look like? Where would one type the commands to manage the
file system (whats the PilCMU terminal/console?), how would one interact
with the PicoLisp R
On Sun, Sep 21, 2014 at 07:17:08PM +0200, jerome moliere wrote:
> Is there a guide explaining major differences between Common Lisp &
I'm afraid, not in a single place.
> PicoLisp ? I guess, reading your answer , that there 's no just a few
> syntactic differences between the 2 dialects ... I c
jerome moliere writes:
> Thanks for your quick reply...
> Is there a guide explaining major differences between Common Lisp &
> PicoLisp ? I guess, reading your answer , that there 's no just a few
> syntactic differences between the 2 dialects ... I can read between
> the lines some philosophica
Thanks for your quick reply...
Is there a guide explaining major differences between Common Lisp &
PicoLisp ? I guess, reading your answer , that there 's no just a few
syntactic differences between the 2 dialects ... I can read between the
lines some philosophical major differences , right?
What
Hi Jerome,
> I do not intend to spam your mailing list , sorry if this question sounds
> stupid for many of you but I had a look to the PicoLisp language.
No problem. Don't worry!
> I am not a
> Lisp expert but I can write Clojure code & Emacs Lisp I'd like to know
> how far/close PicoLisp
Hi all,
I do not intend to spam your mailing list , sorry if this question sounds
stupid for many of you but I had a look to the PicoLisp language.I am not a
Lisp expert but I can write Clojure code & Emacs Lisp I'd like to know
how far/close PicoLisp is from Common Lisp or other Lisp dialects.
Le 21/09/2014 15:56, Heow Goodman a écrit :
Perhaps like the 144-core forth chip:
http://www.greenarraychips.com/
I had a somewhat similar thought…
Without going as far as that (the F18A is a very special core — unclocked, 18
bits words, … — and as such very small and low power), I think
Perhaps like the 144-core forth chip:
http://www.greenarraychips.com/
- h
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Hello Kuba Tyszko :-)
You are now subscribed
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Dear Raman,
> > on extremely small systems back then in Munich. However, I was reluctant
> > to mention it here, because I didn't think it was in _that_ range (i.e.
> > 128 kB (?)).
>
> Sure. The stm32f103re has just 64KB internal SRAM. PicoLisp can run on it.
Wow, great! I wasn't aware of that
Hi all,
I will not hesitate once my kits received
In fact the application requires extensibility that'w why I'd like to be
able to run a Lisp interpreter for being able to
develop smart & safe software updates , the code is data / data is code
philosophy is really well suited for such use case
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