From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
*Lisp (StarLisp)
Paradigms Multi-paradigm: functional, procedural, reflective, meta, parallel
Family Lisp
Designed byCliff Lasser, Steve Omohundro
Developer Thinking Machines Corporation
First appeared1986; 38 years ago (1986)
Typing discipline Dynamic, strong
Scope Static, lexical
Implementation language Common Lisp
Platform Connection Machine
OSConnection Machine
Influenced by
Lisp, Common Lisp
Influenced
C*

*Lisp (or StarLisp) is a programming language, a dialect of the language Lisp. [1] It was conceived of in 1985 by two employees of the Thinking Machines Corporation, Cliff Lasser and Steve Omohundro, as a way to provide an efficient yet high-level language for programming the nascent Connection Machine (CM).

History

Prelude

At the time the Connection Machine was being designed and built, the only language being actively developed for it was an assembly-level language named PARIS (Parallel Instruction Set). It became evident that a better way to program the machine was needed, and quickly. Waiting for the completion of Connection Machine Lisp (CM Lisp), an implementation of the very high-level programming language Lisp with parallel computing extensions) was not an option. CM Lisp had been proposed by Danny Hillis, and development was expected to continue for several more years.

Development

A *Lisp interpreter was initially developed. It became apparent quickly that a *Lisp compiler, translating *Lisp into Lisp and PARIS, would be needed to attain the giga FLOPS speed that was attainable in theory by a Connection Machine. The *Lisp compiler was written by Jeff Mincy and was first released in 1986. An application achieving more than two gigaFLOPS, a helicopter wake simulator, was developed by Alan Egolf, then an employee of United Technologies, and J. P. Massar, a Thinking Machines employee, in 1987. [2]

A *Lisp Simulator, an emulator meant to run *Lisp code on standard, non-parallel machines, was developed at the same time by J. P. Massar. This simulator still exists, [3] and was ported to American National Standards Institute (ANSI) Common Lisp (CL) in 2001. An older version written in the original CL, exists in the Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) artificial intelligence (AI) repository. [4]

Later versions of *Lisp, involving significant upgrades to its functions and performance, were worked on by Cliff Lasser, Jeff Mincy, and J. P. Massar through 1989. *Lisp was implemented on the Thinking Machines CM5 circa 1990–1991 by J. P. Massar and Mario Bourgoin.

1958 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020
 LISP 1, 1.5, LISP 2(abandoned)
  Maclisp
  Interlisp
  MDL
  Lisp Machine Lisp
  Scheme  R5RS  R6RS  R7RS small
  NIL
  ZIL (Zork Implementation Language)
  Franz Lisp
  Common Lisp  ANSI standard
  Le Lisp
  MIT Scheme
  XLISP
  T
  Chez Scheme
  Emacs Lisp
  AutoLISP
  PicoLisp
  Gambit
  EuLisp
  ISLISP
  OpenLisp
  PLT Scheme   Racket
  newLISP
  GNU Guile
  Visual LISP
  Clojure
  Arc
  LFE
  Hy
  Chialisp

Implementation

StarLisp was written on Common Lisp (CL), and thus had the full power of CL behind it. To use a Connection Machine, one needed a host or front-end. To use *Lisp, that front-end had to run CL. Symbolics' machines using Genera and Sun Microsystems workstations running Lucid Inc.'s Lucid Common Lisp were both used to operate *Lisp.

StarLisp operated on Parallel Variables (PVARS). These represented Connection Machine memory, and were essentially vectors: one element per CM processor (or virtual processor).

StarLisp consisted of standard operations on PVARS, like vector addition and multiplication, along with communication primitives that essentially reordered the elements of a PVAR using the CM's communication hardware to optimally route the data.

References

  1. ^ McJones, Paul (2015-04-19). "Parallel Lisps: Connection Machine *Lisp (StarLisp)". Computer History Museum. Retrieved 2018-12-29.
  2. ^ Helicopter Free Wake Implementation On Advanced Computer Architectures, International Conference on Basic Rotorcraft Research, 1988.
  3. ^ "Franz Inc". Franz Inc. Archived from the original on 2005-03-06. Retrieved 2005-06-26.
  4. ^ Massar, J. P. (13 February 1995). "STARSIM: Thinking Machines' *Lisp Simulator". Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) Artificial Intelligence Repository. Retrieved 2018-12-29.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
*Lisp (StarLisp)
Paradigms Multi-paradigm: functional, procedural, reflective, meta, parallel
Family Lisp
Designed byCliff Lasser, Steve Omohundro
Developer Thinking Machines Corporation
First appeared1986; 38 years ago (1986)
Typing discipline Dynamic, strong
Scope Static, lexical
Implementation language Common Lisp
Platform Connection Machine
OSConnection Machine
Influenced by
Lisp, Common Lisp
Influenced
C*

*Lisp (or StarLisp) is a programming language, a dialect of the language Lisp. [1] It was conceived of in 1985 by two employees of the Thinking Machines Corporation, Cliff Lasser and Steve Omohundro, as a way to provide an efficient yet high-level language for programming the nascent Connection Machine (CM).

History

Prelude

At the time the Connection Machine was being designed and built, the only language being actively developed for it was an assembly-level language named PARIS (Parallel Instruction Set). It became evident that a better way to program the machine was needed, and quickly. Waiting for the completion of Connection Machine Lisp (CM Lisp), an implementation of the very high-level programming language Lisp with parallel computing extensions) was not an option. CM Lisp had been proposed by Danny Hillis, and development was expected to continue for several more years.

Development

A *Lisp interpreter was initially developed. It became apparent quickly that a *Lisp compiler, translating *Lisp into Lisp and PARIS, would be needed to attain the giga FLOPS speed that was attainable in theory by a Connection Machine. The *Lisp compiler was written by Jeff Mincy and was first released in 1986. An application achieving more than two gigaFLOPS, a helicopter wake simulator, was developed by Alan Egolf, then an employee of United Technologies, and J. P. Massar, a Thinking Machines employee, in 1987. [2]

A *Lisp Simulator, an emulator meant to run *Lisp code on standard, non-parallel machines, was developed at the same time by J. P. Massar. This simulator still exists, [3] and was ported to American National Standards Institute (ANSI) Common Lisp (CL) in 2001. An older version written in the original CL, exists in the Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) artificial intelligence (AI) repository. [4]

Later versions of *Lisp, involving significant upgrades to its functions and performance, were worked on by Cliff Lasser, Jeff Mincy, and J. P. Massar through 1989. *Lisp was implemented on the Thinking Machines CM5 circa 1990–1991 by J. P. Massar and Mario Bourgoin.

1958 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020
 LISP 1, 1.5, LISP 2(abandoned)
  Maclisp
  Interlisp
  MDL
  Lisp Machine Lisp
  Scheme  R5RS  R6RS  R7RS small
  NIL
  ZIL (Zork Implementation Language)
  Franz Lisp
  Common Lisp  ANSI standard
  Le Lisp
  MIT Scheme
  XLISP
  T
  Chez Scheme
  Emacs Lisp
  AutoLISP
  PicoLisp
  Gambit
  EuLisp
  ISLISP
  OpenLisp
  PLT Scheme   Racket
  newLISP
  GNU Guile
  Visual LISP
  Clojure
  Arc
  LFE
  Hy
  Chialisp

Implementation

StarLisp was written on Common Lisp (CL), and thus had the full power of CL behind it. To use a Connection Machine, one needed a host or front-end. To use *Lisp, that front-end had to run CL. Symbolics' machines using Genera and Sun Microsystems workstations running Lucid Inc.'s Lucid Common Lisp were both used to operate *Lisp.

StarLisp operated on Parallel Variables (PVARS). These represented Connection Machine memory, and were essentially vectors: one element per CM processor (or virtual processor).

StarLisp consisted of standard operations on PVARS, like vector addition and multiplication, along with communication primitives that essentially reordered the elements of a PVAR using the CM's communication hardware to optimally route the data.

References

  1. ^ McJones, Paul (2015-04-19). "Parallel Lisps: Connection Machine *Lisp (StarLisp)". Computer History Museum. Retrieved 2018-12-29.
  2. ^ Helicopter Free Wake Implementation On Advanced Computer Architectures, International Conference on Basic Rotorcraft Research, 1988.
  3. ^ "Franz Inc". Franz Inc. Archived from the original on 2005-03-06. Retrieved 2005-06-26.
  4. ^ Massar, J. P. (13 February 1995). "STARSIM: Thinking Machines' *Lisp Simulator". Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) Artificial Intelligence Repository. Retrieved 2018-12-29.

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