I believe this makes me owner #2 of the #t3x programming language formal definition. My first inclination is to write a lisp for the tcode machine but given the author I feel this has already happened? Chapter 6 is very cool to see the variants of asm for each instruction for z80 8086 and ARMv6.
@nil Always good to see a picture of one of my books! :) I have written several LISPs in T3X, so in principle they would run on the TCVM, but maybe you have something different in mind.
I wanted to include a link, but then saw that I have actually never uploaded a T3X/0 version of a tiny LISP. Strange, it has been finished for a while now.
@nil Uploaded the T3X/0 version of Kilo LISP 22: http://t3x.org/t3x/0/programs.html#klisp220
Nothing new, just the T3X/0 port of an interpreter I wrote a few years ago. Can be compiled to TCVM code.
In 1984, 40 years ago, Digital Press published the book "Common LISP: Reference Manual" by Guy L. Steele Jr. and others, more widely known as the first edition of "Common Lisp: The Language" or CLtL1. It was an early major milestone of a Lisp standardization process completed a decade later.
I'm happy to welcome to Mastodon @AverageDog Nils Holm, author of "Write Your Own Retro Compiler" and other great books on compilers, programming languages, Lisp, and more.