23:53:55no-defun-allowedYes, I used a program written in Lisp to emit a Java program that had ASCII art in it for a Java assignment.
23:54:15mega_hateri want to create a lisp program in the shape of a vagina
23:54:31no-defun-allowedThough pedantically that was Unicode art, I used the box drawing characters to make each 2x2 block of pixels into one character.
0:02:49no-defun-allowedThat raises interesting questions about what constitutes "source code" for that course. That was generated code (and it had a "written by PROGRAM-NAME.lisp, do not edit" header) but I didn't get into trouble for submitting that.
0:03:27no-defun-allowedAnd I ended up changing it to 2x4 or something because most terminal fonts are taller than they are wide. A fun hack nonetheless.
4:10:02markasoftwareHas anyone here used cl-typesetting? How is it compared to TeX?
4:13:00no-defun-allowedIt's quite a bit less powerful than TeX. There's only a few inbuilt fonts and none support non-ASCII characters from what I remember.
4:14:03no-defun-allowedIt's much more convenient than writing TeX I suppose, but it's quite limiting in what you can do.
4:15:05iissaaccits sure to be less painful than TeX god i hate TeX
4:16:12markasoftwareDoes it support mat hstuff fairly well? Like integrals or cube roots for example
4:16:17no-defun-allowedBut it can't do close to as much as TeX; I used cl-typesetting because I didn't want to lug around a TeX system for an accounting program.
4:16:29no-defun-allowedI don't think there was much math support. (And I really didn't like the fonts.)