About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 57. Chapters: Common Lisp software, Free software programmed in Lisp, Cyc, Maxima, Kyoto Common Lisp, ACL2, Genera, Emacs, ACT-R, Qi, Macsyma, Axiom, SHINE Expert System, SK8, ICAD, SNePS, Soar, Nqthm, SymbolicWeb, Gnus, Dynamic Analysis and Replanning Tool, Emacspeak, CMU Common Lisp, AUCTEX, *Lisp, LispWorks, Steel Bank Common Lisp, Allegro Common Lisp, CL-HTTP, Copycat, Apple Dylan, ITA Software, Game Oriented Assembly Lisp, 4CAPS, AARON, OpenMusic, Scieneer Common Lisp, Clozure CL, CLISP, Macintosh Common Lisp, SLIME, Sawfish, KEE, SNARK, OPS5, Another System Definition Facility, CommonLoops, LOOM, GNU Common Lisp, Common Lisp Interface Manager, Derive, Actor-Based Concurrent Language, Weblocks, Reduce, Hemlock, Prototype Verification System, Corman Common Lisp, Wanderlust, Climacs, Emacs/W3, CLiki, Embeddable Common Lisp, Clfswm, CLPython, Common Music Notation, MuMATH, Mirai, CLforJava, NESL, Common Lisp Music, KM programming language, Movitz, OBJ3, LKB, UnCommon Web, CLX, Simple Grid Protocol, SubL, Theorem Proving System, Apel, AllegroCache, Ironclad. Excerpt: Emacs (pronounced ) is a class of text editors, usually characterized by their extensibility. Emacs has over 1,000 commands. It also allows the user to combine these commands into macros to automate work. Development began in the mid-1970s and continues actively as of 2011. The most popular version of Emacs is GNU Emacs, a part of the GNU Project, which is commonly referred to simply as "Emacs." The GNU Emacs manual describes it as "the extensible, customizable, self-documenting, real-time display editor." It is also the most ported of the implementations of Emacs. As of March 2011, the latest stable release of GNU Emacs is version 23.3. Aside from GNU Emacs, another version of Emacs in common use, XEmacs, forked from GNU Emacs in 1991. XEmacs has remained mostly co...