None of ANSI Common Lisp is off-limits.
+I think my Lisp style is rather more imperative in flavour than most
+modern Lisp programmers. It's probably closer to historical Lisp
+practice in that regard, even though I wasn't writing Lisp back then.
+
I make extensive use of CLOS, and macros. On a couple of occasions I've
made macros which use CLOS generic function dispatch to compute their
expansions. The parser language is probably the best example of this in
-the codebase. I like hairy ~format~ strings.
+the codebase.
+
+I like hairy ~format~ strings.
I've avoided hairy ~loop~ for the most part, not because I dislike it
strongly but because others do and I don't find that it wins big enough
+ The default predicate always has ~-p~ appended. If the class name
is a single word, then I'll explicitly name the predicate with a
simple ~p~ suffix. For example, ~ship~ would have the predicate
- ~shipp~, rather than ~ship-p~.
+ ~shipp~, rather than ~ship-p~.
+ If there are slots I can't default then I'll usually provide a BOA
constructor which sets them from required parameters; other slots