Visual LISP, AutoLISP and General Customization
cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

I want to learn how to write my own LISP routines

7 REPLIES 7
Reply
Message 1 of 8
Anonymous
1070 Views, 7 Replies

I want to learn how to write my own LISP routines

<<< Message <38BDEC9B.46F3855F@caribe.net> was originally posted to 'pn.classifieds' on Thu, 02 Mar 2000 00:22:51 -0400.>>>

I want to learn how to write my own LISP routines.
Where's a good place to start?
7 REPLIES 7
Message 2 of 8
Anonymous
in reply to: Anonymous

Here's a site for you to check out:

http://afralisp.hypermart.net/tutor.htm

Dave

F wrote in message
news:89lsma$ctr12@adesknews2.autodesk.com...
> <<< Message <38BDEC9B.46F3855F@caribe.net> was originally posted to
'pn.classifieds' on Thu, 02 Mar 2000 00:22:51 -0400.>>>
>
> I want to learn how to write my own LISP routines.
> Where's a good place to start?
Message 3 of 8
Anonymous
in reply to: Anonymous

I think one of the best things you can do is just what you're doing now.
Watch this newsgroup, play around with some of the code that is posted, and
ask questions when it gets confusing. This newsgroup is a great resource.

==============================
Michael Weaver
By day: Charles Bettisworth & Co.
mweaver@bettisworth.com
By night: AlasCAD
alascad@go.com
AOL Instant messenger screen name:
AlasCAD
AUGI #w2170
==============================

"F" wrote in message
news:89lsma$ctr12@adesknews2.autodesk.com...
> <<< Message <38BDEC9B.46F3855F@caribe.net> was originally posted to
'pn.classifieds' on Thu, 02 Mar 2000 00:22:51 -0400.>>>
>
> I want to learn how to write my own LISP routines.
> Where's a good place to start?
Message 4 of 8
Anonymous
in reply to: Anonymous

I would have to agree with the last post. Watch this newsgroup and read.
Also, look at some existing AutoLISP files that AutoCAD has installed and
try to follow them.

F wrote in message
news:89lsma$ctr12@adesknews2.autodesk.com...
> <<< Message <38BDEC9B.46F3855F@caribe.net> was originally posted to
'pn.classifieds' on Thu, 02 Mar 2000 00:22:51 -0400.>>>
>
> I want to learn how to write my own LISP routines.
> Where's a good place to start?
Message 5 of 8
Anonymous
in reply to: Anonymous

Michael,

I too was in your position last year. I book books and took a Lisp class with
a college here in my city. I have a couple really good books at work if you
want to email me there I will give you the titles.

Wayne Bork bork@benteler.com

Michael Weaver wrote:

> I think one of the best things you can do is just what you're doing now.
> Watch this newsgroup, play around with some of the code that is posted, and
> ask questions when it gets confusing. This newsgroup is a great resource.
>
> ==============================
> Michael Weaver
> By day: Charles Bettisworth & Co.
> mweaver@bettisworth.com
> By night: AlasCAD
> alascad@go.com
> AOL Instant messenger screen name:
> AlasCAD
> AUGI #w2170
> ==============================
>
> "F" wrote in message
> news:89lsma$ctr12@adesknews2.autodesk.com...
> > <<< Message <38BDEC9B.46F3855F@caribe.net> was originally posted to
> 'pn.classifieds' on Thu, 02 Mar 2000 00:22:51 -0400.>>>
> >
> > I want to learn how to write my own LISP routines.
> > Where's a good place to start?
Message 6 of 8
Anonymous
in reply to: Anonymous

There is a great LISP learning resource of http://deja.com
Go there, do a search on comp.cad.autocad or
autodesk.autocad.customization newsgroups for any
topic you're interested in. It has postings archived
stretching back for as long ago as 1995 (I think).

Invaluable!

> Michael Weaver wrote:
>
> > I think one of the best things you can do is just what you're doing now.
> > Watch this newsgroup, play around with some of the code that is posted,
and
> > ask questions when it gets confusing. This newsgroup is a great
resource.
Message 7 of 8
Anonymous
in reply to: Anonymous

Deja.com?? But isn't that a Borland web site?

Vladimir Nesterovsky wrote:
>
> There is a great LISP learning resource of http://deja.com
> Go there, do a search on comp.cad.autocad or
> autodesk.autocad.customization newsgroups for any
> topic you're interested in. It has postings archived
> stretching back for as long ago as 1995 (I think).
>
> Invaluable!
>
> > Michael Weaver wrote:
> >
> > > I think one of the best things you can do is just what you're doing now.
> > > Watch this newsgroup, play around with some of the code that is posted,
> and
> > > ask questions when it gets confusing. This newsgroup is a great
> resource.

--
/*********************************************************/
/* Tony Tanzillo Design Automation Consulting */
/* Programming & Customization for AutoCAD & Compatibles */
/* ----------------------------------------------------- */
/* tony.tanzillo@worldnet.att.net */
/* http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/tonyt */
/*********************************************************/
Message 8 of 8
Anonymous
in reply to: Anonymous

I don't think so.

It was dejanews.com previously, now it's called deja.com.
It is the biggest and fullest newsgroups archive. You can
find there any comp.cad.autocad posting from as far back
as 1995. It has the greatest most versatile blazingly fast
search engine. Makes this other ng search page 😉 look like
a bad joke. Even this ng (autodesk.autocad.customization)
is searchable from there, but it is no longer archived for about
half a year now, so only older postings will be found.

You can define any query there and find all the articles
posted on some issue you're interesting in or trying
to learn. Anyone can do it and instead of asking the
same question on the ng, just find the answer instantly
(if it was previously answered). Makes FAQs less significant.

Of course postings from here aren't archived anymore,
since the link was cut off some half year ago.
It's a mystery it existed previously in the first place. 😐

Just another good reason to stop posting here anything
substantial -- it'll just be wasted here. No newcomer will be
able to find it later on, and after half a year everything gets
deleted from this server.

Not so on DEJA.COM.

Tony Tanzillo wrote in message
news:38C33334.19D6BC81@worldnet.att.net...
> Deja.com?? But isn't that a Borland web site?
>
> Vladimir Nesterovsky wrote:
> >
> > There is a great LISP learning resource of http://deja.com
> > Go there, do a search on comp.cad.autocad or
> > autodesk.autocad.customization newsgroups for any
> > topic you're interested in. It has postings archived
> > stretching back for as long ago as 1995 (I think).
> >
> > Invaluable!

Can't find what you're looking for? Ask the community or share your knowledge.

Post to forums  

Autodesk Design & Make Report

”Boost