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What is Lisp

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tjcberman@gmail.com

Lisp: An Overview

Lisp (short for "LISt Processing") is a family of programming languages, originally developed in the late 1950s by John McCarthy. Known for its unique, parenthesis-heavy syntax and powerful features for symbolic computation and recursive functions, Lisp has been influential in artificial intelligence research and the development of programming language theory.

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tjcberman@gmail.com

Can you explain a little of Lisp semantics?

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tjcberman@gmail.com

Understanding Lisp Semantics

Lisp's semantics revolve around the evaluation of S-expressions. Every expression in Lisp is either an atom or a list.

Atoms (like numbers or symbols) evaluate to themselves or their bound values. Lists generally represent function applications, where the first element is interpreted as the function and the remaining elements as its arguments.

The language embraces the idea that code and data share the same form—lists—enabling powerful metaprogramming through constructs like macros. Additionally, Lisp supports first-class functions and dynamic or lexical scoping rules that determine how variables are bound to values during evaluation.

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