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| | Lisp programming language - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | During the 1980s and 1990s, a great effort was made to unify the numerous Lisp dialects (most notably, InterLisp, Maclisp, ZetaLisp, and Franz Lisp) into a single language. |
 | | The new language, Common Lisp, was essentially a compatible subset of the dialects it replaced. |
 | | InterLisp [12] – developed at BBN for PDP-10 systems running the Tenex operating system, later adopted as a "West coast" Lisp for the Xerox Lisp machines. |
| en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Lisp_programming_language (5127 words) |
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