[cells-devel] Cells 2.0pre2

Thomas F. Burdick tfb at OCF.Berkeley.EDU
Tue May 3 11:41:07 UTC 2005


A new candidate:

  http://www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~tfb/cells_2.0pre2.tar.gz

This works for me in SBCL, LispWorks, CLISP, and and older OpenMCL.  
James, could you check this on your OpenMCL?

The only notable failure is CMUCL: it looks like Cells can trigger a
bug in CMUCL's constructor optimizations.  I'll try to file a bug
before they release 19b, but for now it looks like CMUCL is in the
partially supported category.

If there are no objections, I'll put this up on c-l.net tomorrow, and
announce in whatever fora strike my fancy.  I've appended the README
file below:



***** About Cells *****

(Installation instructions follow)

Cells is a mature, stable extension to CLOS that allows you to create
classes, the instances of which have slots whose values are determined
by a formula. Think of the slots as cells in a spreadsheet (get it?),
and you've got the right idea. You can use any arbitrary Common Lisp
expression to specify the value of a cell. The Cells system takes care
of tracking dependencies among cells, and propagating values. It is
distributed under an MIT-style license.

Documentation is unfortunately quite lacking; the cells-devel list is
still your best source of information.  Some documentation can be
found in the doc/ directory of the distribution.  See the website at
http://www.common-lisp.net/project/cells/ for more info.

Cells is written in almost-portable ANSI Common Lisp.  It makes very
light use of the introspective portions of the MOP, and contains a few
workarounds for shortcomings in common implementations.  It contains
gratuitous use of silly reader conditionals (eg, #-chya, #-not, etc),
so users wishing to push things like :TEST and :NOT on *FEATURES*, and
users of the New Implementation of Lisp (NIL) should beware.  If the
last sentance didn't mean anything to you, you can ignore it.

Cells is known to currently work on the following Lisp implementations:

  * Allegro
  * SBCL
  * CLISP
  * LispWorks
  * OpenMCL

Partially supported are:

  * CMUCL
  * Corman Lisp
  * MCL

One of the Cells tests fails with CMUCL.  This appears to be caused by
a bug in its CLOS implementation, but has not been investigated in
great depth.

Cells is belived to work with Corman CL, but has not been recently
tested.  In the past, MCL was supported, but a it does not currently
pass the test suite.  Ressurecting full support for any of these
implementations should be easy.

Porting Cells to an unsupported but ANSI-conforming Lisp
implementation should be trivial: mostly a matter of determining the
package where the MOP lives.  In reality, however, you might have to
find workarounds for bugs in ANSI compliance.



***** Installation *****

[ Cells follows the usual convention for asdf and asdf-installable
  packages.  If you know what that means, that's all you need to
  know. ]

Installation is trivial for asdf-install users:

  (asdf-install:install :cells)

Users without asdf-install will need to download the distribution from
common-lisp.net.  If your implementation does not come with ASDF,
please complain to the implementor, then load the asdf.lisp file
included in the Cells distribution.

Unpack the distribution where you will.

Unix users: If you do not already have an asdf central registry,
create a directory calld asdf-registry under your home directory and
push this onto asdf:*central-registry*.  Create symlinks there to the
cells.asd and cells-test.asd files in the distribution.  Alternately,
follow the instructions for Windows users.

Windows and Classic Mac users: Push the directory where you unpacked
the Cells distribution onto asdf:*central-registry*.

You can now load Cells in the usual manner for asdf.

SLIME:

  ,load-system cells

SBCL:

  (require :cells)

Other systems:

  (asdf:oos 'asdf:load-op :cells)

You may wish to run the test suite.  To do so, use asdf to load the
:cells-test system.



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