5:00:39pierpait's not uncommon that even very expert long-time implementor misunderstand some things in the CLHS, go figure *learners* of the language.
13:04:59dxtrPossible stupid question: Has there been any community efforts to create a new, "cleaned up", lisp specification? Seeing as a lot of stuff is marked as "deprecated" and things like that
13:05:59dxtrI don't specifically mean to create a new "web 2.0 web-scale all-the-buzzwords" thing -- but rather to clean up the specification and rationalize things
13:06:08jackdanielcdr is meant for extending standard for missing features: https://common-lisp.net/project/cdr/
13:06:47jackdanielcl21 is an effort to add some syntactic sugar and remove deprecated features: http://cl21.org/
13:07:24jackdanielergolib is another project which provides more intelligible package: https://github.com/rongarret/ergolib
13:08:09jackdanielrutils is similar with its goals: https://github.com/vseloved/rutils
13:08:48jackdanielclojure is a language designed by a disappointed Common Lisper
13:09:05jackdanieleulisp is a language designed to provide modern Lisp somewhere between Scheme and CL
13:09:21scymtym_beach has a project aiming at producing a corrected and more precise but compatible specification for common lisp
13:09:26jackdanielracket is scheme descendant with many goodies
13:10:06jackdanielthere are many compatibility layer projects which bring various implementations together: bordeaux-threads, closer-mop, trivial-gray-streams, usocket