When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Lisp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lisp

    A lateral lisp occurs when the [s] and [z] sounds are produced with air-flow over the sides of the tongue. It is also called "slushy ess" or a "slushy lisp" in part due to its wet, spitty sound. The symbols for these lateralised sounds in the extensions to the International Phonetic Alphabet for disordered speech are [ʪ] and [ʫ].

  3. OpenMusic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenMusic

    OpenMusic (OM) is an object-oriented visual programming environment for musical composition based on Common Lisp. It may also be used as an all-purpose visual interface to Lisp programming. At a more specialized level, a set of provided classes and libraries make it a very convenient environment for music composition. [1]

  4. Common Lisp Music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_Lisp_Music

    CLM (originally an acronym for Common Lisp Music) is a music synthesis and signal processing package in the Music V family created by Bill Schottstaedt. It runs in a number of various Lisp implementations or as a part of the Snd audio editor (using Scheme , Ruby and now Forth ).

  5. List of audio programming languages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_audio_programming...

    Common Lisp Music (CLM), a music synthesis and signal processing package in the Music V family; Csound, a MUSIC-N synthesis language released under the LGPL with many available unit generators; Extempore, a live-coding environment that borrows a core foundation from the Impromptu environment

  6. Hy (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hy_(programming_language)

    Similar to Kawa's and Clojure's mappings onto the Java virtual machine (JVM), [6] [7] Hy is meant to operate as a transparent Lisp front-end for Python. [8] It allows Python libraries, including the standard library, to be imported and accessed alongside Hy code with a compiling [note 1] step where both languages are converted into Python's AST.

  7. Kent Pitman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kent_Pitman

    In some posts there, he has expressed his opinion on open-source software, including open source implementations of Lisp and Scheme, as something that should be judged individually on its essential merits, rather than automatically considered good merely by being free or open.

  8. 30 of the Most Iconic Songs of the 1980s You Forgot About - AOL

    www.aol.com/30-most-iconic-songs-1980s-190700298...

    Here's a list of the best songs from the time, ranging from Toto to Michael Jackson. The 1980s produced chart-topping hits in pop, hip-hop, rock, and R&B. Here's a list of the best songs from the ...

  9. David A. Moon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_A._Moon

    Moon was one of the original members of Greenblatt's project to develop the MIT Lisp Machine, beginning in 1974. [3] In 1976, with Steele, he wrote the first (TECO-based) version of the Emacs text editor, [4] [5] and in 1978 with Daniel Weinreb he coauthored the manual for the Lisp Machine, known as the chine nual.