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archivesLisp-Stat does not seem to be in good health lately.The Journal of Statistical Software http://www.jstatsoft.org/ has a Special Volume devoted to the topic: "Lisp-Stat, Past, Present and Future". In the world of statistics, it appears that XLISP-STAT http://www.stat.uiowa.edu/~luke/xls/xlsinfo/xlsinfo.html has lost out to the S family of languages: S / R / S-plus:
In fact, the S languages are not statistical per se; instead they provide an environment within which many classical and modern statistical techniques have been implemented. An article giving an excellent overview of the special volume is: "The Health of Lisp-Stat" http://www.jstatsoft.org/v13/i10/v13i10.pdf Some of the articles describe the declining user base of the language due to defections:
whilst other articles describe active projects using XLisp-Stat, often leveraging the power of the language, in particular for producing dynamic graphics. The S family of languages, originally developed at Bell Labs, has much to recommend it. S is an expression language with functional and class features. However, as the original creator and main developer of XLisp-Stat, (and now R developer) Luke Tierney explains in "Some Notes on the Past and Future of Lisp-Stat" http://www.jstatsoft.org/v13/i09/v13i09.pdf ,
Jon Udell: Languages and environmentsLanguages and environments have always been fellow travelers. At some point they'll begin to part ways. Domain-specific languages will continue to flourish; they're the future of programming. But they'll target fewer environments. Jon offers a couple of entertaining examples, but the fundamental point is worth thinking about. Until quite recently the general view was the exact opposite of what Jon is arguing: languages, it was argued, are going to be consolidated. Remember Java as the cure all solution to software? The proliferation of programming languages, domain specific and otherwise, isn't news for LtU readers. It is a good sign to see it mentioned on Infoworld. Why is erlang.org downDoes anybody know why the site is down? Also, where can I find active lists/forums on Erlang? Thanks, Pugs, Practicing the Theories.A lot of language theory goes past here on Lambda the Ultimate, but we rarely see that theory directly impacting commercial programmers. By shapr at 2005-04-05 21:09 | DSL | Fun | Functional | Implementation | Meta-Programming | OOP | Paradigms | Software Engineering | Teaching & Learning | 5 comments | other blogs | 10671 reads
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