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Examples
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And I note that besides your Von Neumann example, curious readers can see the “Replica Trick” in statistical mechanics (online in wikipedia), or in various comments in the source code of the SBCL compiler (online several places, some indexed by search engines), e.g. “the tls-points-into-struct-thread trick is only good for threaded sbcl.”
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Tracing your stack is difficult, but it is possible to debug and even single-step instruction by instruction yourself as a program. sbcl and cmucl do this.
Miriam Ruiz 2007
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The sbcl section uses a $CWD variable to run itself.
Planet Python 2010
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The sbcl section uses a $CWD variable to run itself.
Planet Python 2010
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Without too much further ado, I present sbcl-bugs-mail-forward, which constructs a message (almost) ready to be sent:
Planet Lisp 2010
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The sbcl section uses a $CWD variable to run itself.
Planet Python 2010
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The alert will note that this automatically signs not replies to messages from my sbcl-launchpad buffer, but from any of my list groups matching
Planet Lisp 2010
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Once this is done I can invoke "rlwrap sbcl" to launch the sbcl environment with the readline wrapper around it.
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In short when I'm in the sbcl environment and I press "Up" to recall my previous line of entry I see nothing - which is often frustrating! rlwrap package which wraps readline support around other programs: aptitude install rlwrap Reading package lists ...
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It is hard to demonstrate this offline, but suffice it to say that I can run sbcl under rlwrap and I have persistant history - to the extent that I can load the environment and press "Up" a few times to repeat the things I entered last time round: rlwrap sbcl This is SBCL 1. 0.25.debian, an implementation of ANSI Common Lisp.
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