: Most versions of the script can handle complex entity types like LWPolylines and Splines . Compatibility and Alternatives
And Lisp? Lisp is the perfect knife for cutting through that stream. lisp tlen
(length "Hello") ; Returns 5
Here are a few examples of how "tlen" might be interpreted in a LISP context, assuming it relates to getting the length of something: : Most versions of the script can handle
I recently spent a weekend revisiting Telnet, not as a sysadmin, but as a Lisp programmer. Why? Because stripping away TLS, JSON, and REST frameworks reveals something beautiful: (length "Hello") ; Returns 5 Here are a
If you came of age in the modern cloud era (Post-2010), Telnet is that "insecure thing" you disable on routers. But for those of us who cut our teeth on BBSes, mainframes, or early Unix hacking, —a raw, text-based window into another machine.
The "Lisp Tlen" concept posits that current Lisp implementations, while powerful, have become too permissive. They allow code to accumulate without metabolic cost. We propose a new dialect where code must struggle for survival.