clisp
- Common Lisp language interpreter and compiler
clisp
[ -h
]
[ -m
memsize ]
[ -W
]
[ -M
memfile ]
[ -L
language ]
[ -N
localedir ]
[ -q
]
[ -I
]
[ -C
]
[ -i
initfile ... ]
[ -c
[ -l
] lispfile [ -o
outputfile ] ... ]
[ -p
packagename ]
[ -x
expression ]
[ lispfile
[ argument ... ] ]
-c
,
the specified lisp files are compiled to a bytecode that can be executed
more efficiently.
-h
clisp
.
-m
memsize
clisp
tries to grab
on startup. The amount may be given as nnnnnnn (measured in bytes),
nnnn K
or nnnn KB
(measured in kilobytes) or
n M
or n MB
(measured in megabytes).
Default is 2 megabytes.
The argument is constrained between 100 KB and 64 MB.
-- This version of clisp
allocates memory dynamically.
memsize is essentially ignored.
Nevertheless, the memory size is limited to 16 MB per Lisp type (cons, string,
structure, etc.), unless the -W
option
is given.
-W
clisp
.
It uses a 64-bit object representation instead of the usual 32-bit
representation. This version of clisp
is slower, but has no
memory size limitations.
-M
memfile
-L
language
clisp
uses to communicate with the user. This may be
english
, deutsch
, francais
.
-N
localedir
clisp
will search its message catalogs in
localedir/
language/LC_MESSAGES/clisp.
ext.
-q
clisp
displays no banner at startup and no good-bye message when quitting.
-I
clisp
interacts in a way that ILISP (a popular Emacs LISP interface) can deal with.
Currently the only effect of this is that unnecessary prompts are not
suppressed.
-C
*load-compiling*
will be set to t
.
Code being load
ed will then be compiled on the fly. This results
in slower loading, but faster execution.
-i
initfile ...
load
ed
at startup. These should be lisp files (source or compiled).
-c
lispfile ...
load
ed instead of the sources to gain efficiency.
-o
outputfile
-l
-p
packagename
*package*
will
be set to the package named packagename.
-x
expressions
*args*
will be bound to a list of strings, representing the arguments.
If lispfile is -
, the standard input is used instead of
a file.
This option must be the last one.
Guy L. Steele Jr.: Common Lisp - The Language. Digital Press. 1st edition 1984, 465 pages. ("CLtL1" for short)and to the older parts of
Guy L. Steele Jr.: Common Lisp - The Language. Digital Press. 2nd edition 1990, 1032 pages. ("CLtL2" for short)
help
(apropos
name)
(exit)
or (quit)
or (bye)
clisp
.
lispinit.mem
config.lsp
*.lsp
*.fas
clisp
*.lib
clisp
compiler
*.c
clisp
CLISP_LANGUAGE
clisp
uses to communicate with the user. The value may be
english
, deutsch
, francais
and defaults to english
.
The -L
option can be used to override this environment variable.
LANG
clisp
uses to communicate with the user, unless it is already specified through
the environment variable CLISP_LANGUAGE
or the
-L
option. The value may begin with
a two-letter ISO 639 language code, for example
en
, de
, fr
.
See also
cmucl
(1),
emacs
(1).
Bugs
inspect
is not implemented.
apropos
and describe
is available.
inspect
.
Last modified: 12 June 1997.