> Lisp's dreaded Cambridge Polish notation is uniform and universal. I don't have to remember whether a form takes curly braces or square brackets or what the operator precedency is or some weird punctuated syntax that was invented for no good reason. It is (operator operands ...) for everything. Nothing to remember. I basically stopped noticing the parenthesis 40 years ago. I can indent how I please.
Well, that might be true for Scheme, but not for CL. There are endless forms for loops. I will never remember all of them. Or even a fraction of it. Going through Guy Steel’s CL book, I tend to think that I have a hard time remembering most of the forms, functions, and their signatures.
Well, that might be true for Scheme, but not for CL. There are endless forms for loops. I will never remember all of them. Or even a fraction of it. Going through Guy Steel’s CL book, I tend to think that I have a hard time remembering most of the forms, functions, and their signatures.