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Daniel Kochmański f1bc883ed6 clos: introduce class stamps for marking instances obsolete
We should call make-instances-obsolete from finalize-inheritance if we
want to be conforming, because user may have added their own auxiliary
methods.

This change while being last in a serie of commits was locally the
first change which solved problems. It will enable us to implement the
fast generic dispatch after the release.
2020-04-19 17:04:41 +02:00
contrib sockets: don't return the same address multiple times in get-host-by-name 2020-04-19 10:46:03 +02:00
examples examples: add cmake example 2018-08-17 10:45:02 +02:00
msvc fix array dimension limit for msvc win64 2020-03-07 22:26:43 +01:00
src clos: introduce class stamps for marking instances obsolete 2020-04-19 17:04:41 +02:00
.gitignore add msvc/package-locks.asd to .gitignore 2019-03-19 12:52:48 +08:00
.gitlab-ci.yml Add .gitlab-ci.yml 2017-01-11 18:30:33 +00:00
appveyor.yml Add simple appveyor msvc build 2017-05-13 00:12:13 +02:00
CHANGELOG ffi: Update libffi to version 3.3 2019-12-09 19:49:30 +01:00
configure Preserve quoting when passing the arguments to the build directory 2008-08-27 09:50:44 +02:00
COPYING cosmetic: rename LGPL->COPYING 2016-10-08 14:24:31 +02:00
INSTALL doc: more detailed build instructions for MSVC 2020-03-01 18:49:49 +01:00
LICENSE copyright: add Marius to the maintainer list. 2019-02-22 18:43:37 +00:00
Makefile.in doc: set new doc as standard documentation 2019-01-03 19:14:28 +01:00
README.md update readme (typos) 2015-08-31 08:22:52 +00:00

ECL stands for Embeddable Common-Lisp. The ECL project aims to produce an implementation of the Common-Lisp language which complies to the ANSI X3J13 definition of the language.

The term embeddable refers to the fact that ECL includes a Lisp to C compiler, which produces libraries (static or dynamic) that can be called from C programs. Furthermore, ECL can produce standalone executables from Lisp code and can itself be linked to your programs as a shared library. It also features an interpreter for situations when a C compiler isn't available.

ECL supports the operating systems Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, DragonFly BSD, OpenBSD, Solaris (at least v. 9), Microsoft Windows (MSVC, MinGW and Cygwin) and OSX, running on top of the Intel, Sparc, Alpha, ARM and PowerPC processors. Porting to other architectures should be rather easy.