On 2016-01-24 21:37 -0500, Miles Fidelman wrote:
> >The Lisp with M-expressions is called ML.
> >
>
> Ummm.... no. ML was developed at U. of Edinburgh, had very little to do with Lisp,
> other than being implemented on top of Lisp (Lisp is very good for building
> domain-specific languages.) Some history at
> http://sml-family.org/history/ML2015-talk.pdf
>
> You're thinking of MLISP.
Quoting
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MLisp :
MLISP2 was called a transitional language by the authors. Larry Tesler
improved the pattern matching system to implement a successor language
called LISP70, which was only completed to a preliminary version. Though
this path of LISP evolution is widely neglected, it resembles some
features, later found in ML or Scheme.
I was not trying to say that there is a historical line of development
from Lisp to ML, but that a hypothetical well-designed Lisp with infix
syntax looks a lot like ML.
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