Embeddable Common Lisp
| Embeddable Common Lisp | |
|---|---|
| Paradigms | Multi-paradigm: procedural, functional, object-oriented, meta, reflective, generic |
| Family | Lisp |
| Designed by | Giuseppe Attardi |
| Developers | Daniel Kochmański, Marius Gerbershagen |
| First appeared | 1 January 1995 |
| Stable release | 23.9.9[1] |
| Typing discipline | Dynamic, strong |
| Implementation language | C, Common Lisp |
| Platform | ARM, x86 |
| OS | Unix-like, Android, Windows |
| License | LGPL 2.1+ |
| Website | ecl |
| Influenced by | |
| Lisp, Common Lisp, C | |
Embeddable Common Lisp (ECL) is a small implementation of the ANSI Common Lisp programming language that can be used stand-alone or embedded in extant applications written in C. It creates OS-native executables and libraries (i.e. Executable and Linkable Format (ELF) files on unix) from Common Lisp code, and runs on most platforms that support a C compiler. The ECL runtime is a dynamically loadable library for use by applications. It is distributed as free software under a GNU Lesser Public License (LGPL) 2.1+.
It includes a runtime system, and two compilers, a bytecode interpreter allowing applications to be deployed where no C compiler is expected, and an intermediate language type, which compiles Common Lisp to C for a more efficient runtime. The latter also features a native foreign function interface (FFI), that supports inline C as part of Common Lisp. Inline C FFI combined with Common Lisp macros, custom Lisp setf expansions and compiler-macros, result in a custom compile-time C preprocessor.
References
External links
- Giuseppe Attardi. "The Embeddable Common Lisp", ACM Lisp Pointers 8(1), 1995, 30-41.
- Official website
- Embeddable Common-Lisp on GitLab