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Re: beginner el form
From: |
Tim X |
Subject: |
Re: beginner el form |
Date: |
Sun, 01 May 2005 20:37:33 +1000 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.1007 (Gnus v5.10.7) Emacs/21.4 (gnu/linux) |
Adam <nospam@example.com> writes:
> Thi, I think I agree.
>
> As an elisp novice, I'm dropping into it from time to time, and making
> progress with the elisp manual and introduction. Am spending most of my
> other time calling cmucl as a listener with c-x l and c-x c-e. The cmucl
> documentation is good, so am having fun.
>
> The elisp and emacs learning curves are both steady, seems no way around
> that but for further quiet clicking away and reading. Or probably getting
> serious about a bigger but finite application. I know that I'm not getting
> any younger, so whether crazyness or crankiness manifests itself
> first . . .
>
> Meantime I'm happy with emacs and cmucl, and am starting to "get" elisp. So
> thanks to all here on this rather civilized newsgroup.
>
If your interested in Lisp as well as elisp, then you should also
check out SLIME, which I find to be a great lisp mode for emacs. Also,
for a good introductory book on Lisp, I'd highly recommend Practical
common Lisp by Peter Siebel. You can purchase the book, but its also
on-line at http://www.gigamonkeys.com/book/
Tim
--
Tim Cross
The e-mail address on this message is FALSE (obviously!). My real e-mail is
to a company in Australia called rapttech and my login is tcross - if you
really need to send mail, you should be able to work it out!