It's still number theory though.
Most Google open sourced code is on Github. Generally the code made by developers isn't "official" it's just code (documents) made by people at Google.
And why not SBCL?
Using generic methods in lisp worth eql keyword for state change is a natural way of doing this.
I just came to say that the first paragraph of that article is so cringe-worthy I had to post... Terrible, argh... But amazing result.
Definitely not. You're degrees, publications, and jobs but not personal anecdotes. Except for goals and research or teaching philosophy.
Or, really `(hi ,pg!) but please capture that pg!
Fixing your Lisp: (let ((pg! "Paul Graham!")) `(hi ,pg!))
This really was excellent. It actually helps with the category theory def.
I code in lisp for work everyday! This is a bad promise, but I agree lisp is amazing. I've recently been learning to love macros and reading let over lambda is fantastic!
It's still number theory though.
Most Google open sourced code is on Github. Generally the code made by developers isn't "official" it's just code (documents) made by people at Google.
And why not SBCL?
Using generic methods in lisp worth eql keyword for state change is a natural way of doing this.
I just came to say that the first paragraph of that article is so cringe-worthy I had to post... Terrible, argh... But amazing result.
Definitely not. You're degrees, publications, and jobs but not personal anecdotes. Except for goals and research or teaching philosophy.
Or, really `(hi ,pg!) but please capture that pg!
Fixing your Lisp: (let ((pg! "Paul Graham!")) `(hi ,pg!))
This really was excellent. It actually helps with the category theory def.
I code in lisp for work everyday! This is a bad promise, but I agree lisp is amazing. I've recently been learning to love macros and reading let over lambda is fantastic!