8:58:27pjbmintsoup: why do you want to generate assembly level code? Can't you just generate lisp code, and have the implementation compile it for you?
8:59:34mintsoupwasamasa will cmucl docs be of any use? The sbcl documentation references it quite a lot
9:00:08mintsouppjb I can but I just want to use SBCL as a fancy assembler to test some stuff
11:31:04jcowanhttps://docs.scheme.org/surveys/compiler-available/ is a page about how various Schemes do things (straight interpreter, bytecode interpreter, compiler to C, native compiler, etc.)
11:31:22jcowanI should probably add how the CL implementations work
14:05:15Shark8rendar, Here's a toy Lisp, written in Ada as a tutorial, and thus extremely readable: https://github.com/OneWingedShark/Ada_Tutorial and the Lisp 1.5 Programmer's manual: https://web.cse.ohio-state.edu/~rountev.1/6341/pdf/Manual.pdf
14:13:28Shark8prokhor__, White_Flame (re: KB systems) -- I found this interesting paper from NASA: https://ntrs.nasa.gov/api/citations/19890000714/downloads/19890000714.pdf -- The page labeled 10 describes 5 parallelizable potentials.
14:15:42Shark8^-- Thought it was interesting, given our convo the other day.