GTFL – A graphical terminal for Common Lisp
GTFL - A Chart Terminal For Lisp Abstract
GTFL East A chart Terminal For Common Lisp. THE customer East A HTML page running In A the Web Navigator And GTFL provides mechanisms For Sending in progress content has THE customer page Since In Lisp (using HUNCHENTOOT And HT-SIMPLE-AJAX).
He East supposed For Lisp programmers WHO to want has debug Or visualize their own algorithms. Instead of impression trace information has THE Lisp listener (which everyone Normally do has to understand what is this going on), more legible chart representations of THE the algorithm internal components are sent has THE GTFL customer page.
GTFL Also come with mechanisms For visualization complex (hierarchical) data Or control structures. He provides functions For drawing trees And For hidden complexity In elements that develop When THE user clicks on them.
Two real life examples For A application of GTFL can be find here And here. These are debug traces of linguistic analysis And production In THE Fluid Construction Grammar (FCG) frame. Such traces help THE developers FCG has to understand And debug their programs And they help users of FCG has see What their linguistic rules are TO DO. By encapsulating visualizations For representations In stretchable HTML elements, THE complete trace agrees In A Navigator window And always understand each little detail And intermediate treatment stage of THE implied FCG algorithms (which would be be thousands of pages debugging to go out has THE listener).
Below East another example of using GTFL For visualization Lisp data structures. He was created with A little lines of coded (examples/asdf-dependency-tree.lisp) And watch THE Dependencies of A asdf system. Click on on THE black knots has reveal details about THE systems And Click on them A second time has hide THE details once again:
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gtfl
gtfl
description: A Chart Terminal For Lisp. Long description: See http://martin-loetzsch.de/gtfl/ author: Martin Lötzsch Licence: BSD style version: 0.1.3hunchback
hunchback
description: Hunchentoot East A HTTP server base on US PLUG And BORDEAUX-FILS. He supports HTTP 1.1, serves static files, has A simple frame For user defined managers And can be extended through subclassification. version: 1.2.2chunga
chunga
version: 1.1.1trivial-gray-streams
GTFL East A chart Terminal For Common Lisp. THE customer East A HTML page running In A the Web Navigator And GTFL provides mechanisms For Sending in progress content has THE customer page Since In Lisp (using HUNCHENTOOT And HT-SIMPLE-AJAX).
He East supposed For Lisp programmers WHO to want has debug Or visualize their own algorithms. Instead of impression trace information has THE Lisp listener (which everyone Normally do has to understand what is this going on), more legible chart representations of THE the algorithm internal components are sent has THE GTFL customer page.
GTFL Also come with mechanisms For visualization complex (hierarchical) data Or control structures. He provides functions For drawing trees And For hidden complexity In elements that develop When THE user clicks on them.
Two real life examples For A application of GTFL can be find here And here. These are debug traces of linguistic analysis And production In THE Fluid Construction Grammar (FCG) frame. Such traces help THE developers FCG has to understand And debug their programs And they help users of FCG has see What their linguistic rules are TO DO. By encapsulating visualizations For representations In stretchable HTML elements, THE complete trace agrees In A Navigator window And always understand each little detail And intermediate treatment stage of THE implied FCG algorithms (which would be be thousands of pages debugging to go out has THE listener).
Below East another example of using GTFL For visualization Lisp data structures. He was created with A little lines of coded (examples/asdf-dependency-tree.lisp) And watch THE Dependencies of A asdf system. Click on on THE black knots has reveal details about THE systems And Click on them A second time has hide THE details once again:
develop all
collapse all
gtfl
gtfl
description: A Chart Terminal For Lisp. Long description: See http://martin-loetzsch.de/gtfl/ author: Martin Lötzsch Licence: BSD style version: 0.1.3hunchback
hunchback
description: Hunchentoot East A HTTP server base on US PLUG And BORDEAUX-FILS. He supports HTTP 1.1, serves static files, has A simple frame For user defined managers And can be extended through subclassification. version: 1.2.2chunga
chunga
version: 1.1.1trivial-gray-streams
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