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20:40:41
jcowan
I have been thinking about how logging is a special case of the condition system. You set up a log of some sort, create a condition handler that deals with "logging conditions" (whatever they may be), and returns. To log something, just raise a logging condition.
21:41:57
pjb
jcowan: as an example of this, check how ASDF displays the dots while compiling systems.
23:42:14
HM0880
Hello, can I use my existing GitLab account to sign into https://gitlab.common-lisp.net/, or do I need to make a Common-Lisp GitLab account?
23:58:04
White_Flame
so no, it wouldn't have anything to do with the accounts registered on the one that gitlab.com is running
0:06:10
aeth
doesn't really say much about Gitlab's confidence in gitlab.com that you can sign in with other sites (even Github!) but not with Gitlab
0:08:02
HM0880
My question was unclear: https://gitlab.common-lisp.net/users/sign_in does not accept my existing Gitlab credentials.
0:08:40
HM0880
https://common-lisp.net/project-intro has an email for a CL admin, but that email looked like it was intended for joining a project; I just want to report an issue.
0:10:43
edgar-rft
HM0880: in case of doubt there's a #common-lisp.net channel where you can ask the admins themselves
8:09:40
rendar
reading the book Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs says that the language it convers is Scheme and not Lisp, is this normal?
8:14:39
jackdaniel
I've noticed a glitch in the matrix, it may be that they do something to the r eality ,)
8:15:36
jackdaniel
Lisp is often used in a sense "languages that descend from LISP 1.5", in this sense scheme does not qualify. that said scheme is considered a lisp dialect regardless by many (if not most) people