I read this inonPlanet Lisp:
William Bland just keeps on improving lispdoc, his online Lisp documentation search utility. The utility has a lot of neat features:
- A search brings up links to both the CLHS and key CL books and also provides a usage example.
- Content is provided from Practical Common Lisp (PCL), Successful Lisp, On Lisp, the HyperSpec, and the docstrings of SBCL (and, soon, from CLtL2 as well).
- Example code is from Practical Common Lisp, PAIP, ANSI Common Lisp, and a bunch of ASDF-installable libraries.
- There is a Firefox plugin that lets you do searches easily in Firefox.
- There is an htmlize utility that lets you input a snippet of lisp code and get a colorized HTML representation of that code (convenient for quickly getting something that you can put in a web page).
- It provides documentation lookup for a lot of commonly-used CL libraries.
- You can input search terms in a manner similar to SLIME's "fuzzy-complete" (e.g. - if you enter "m-v-b" in the search dialog, it returns the documentation for "multiple-value-bind").
Cite this blog post:
Comments via Github:
2015
paper ResQuotes.com: Turn your Notes and Highlights into Research Ideas
Force11 - Research Communications and e-Scholarship conference, Oxford, UK, Jan 2015.
2014
New Technologies and Renaissance Studies II, ed. Tassie Gniady and others, Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies Series (Iter Academic Press), Dec 2014. Volume 4
2012
NeDiMaH workshop on ontology based annotation, held in conjunction with Digital Humanities 2012, Hamburg, Germany, Jul 2012.
2010