Common Lisp Interface Manager: Difference between revisions

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Lisp Listener in context
The updated guided tour gives more info about CLIM
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The '''Common Lisp Interface Manager''' ('''CLIM''') is a [[Common Lisp]]-based programming interface for creating user interfaces &mdash; i.e., [[GUI]]s. It is completely object-oriented and is based on the idea of stream input and output.<ref>[http://clemens.endorphin.org/a-guided-tour-of-CLIM-2006.pdf A Guided Tour of CLIM, Common Lisp Interface Manager]</ref> There are also facilities for output device independence. It is descended from the GUI system Dynamic Windows of [[Symbolics]]'s [[Lisp machines]]<ref>"...you can check out Common Lisp Interface Manager (CLIM). A descendant of the Symbolics Lisp Machines GUI framework, CLIM is powerful but complex. Although many commercial Common Lisp implementations actually support it, it doesn't seem to have seen a lot of use. But in the past couple years, an open-source implementation of CLIM, [[McCLIM]] --now hosted at [http://common-lisp.net/project/mcclim/ Common-Lisp.net] --has been picking up steam lately, so we may be on the verge of a CLIM renaissance."[http://www.gigamonkeys.com/book/conclusion-whats-next.html] from "Conclusion: What's Next?" in ''[[Practical Common Lisp]]'', by [[Peter Seibel]].</ref>
 
CLIM has been designed to be portable across different [[Common Lisp]] implementations and different [[window system]]s. CLIM supports, like Dynamic Windows, so-called Presentations.<ref>[http://www.textfiles.com/bitsavers/pdf/mit/ai/aim/AITR-794.pdf Presentation Based User Interfaces], MIT Technical Report: AITR-794, 1984, Eugene C. IV Ciccarelli</ref><ref>[http://www.ijcai.org/Past%20Proceedings/IJCAI-81-VOL-2/PDF/076.pdf An information presentation system], Frank Zdybel, Norton R. Greenfeld, Martin D. Yonke</ref>