Common Lisp Quick Reference is a free booklet with short descriptions of the thousand or so symbols defined in the ANSI standard. It comes with a comprehensive index.
This cheat sheet was posted
on Thursday, March 19th, 2009 at 6:44 am and is filed under Cheat Sheets.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
Can you explain how this quick reference is to be read? Page 2 is listed on the same page as Page 51, Page 3 is listed on the same page as Page 50. What is the thinking behind this way of organizing the document? Was it intentional? It appears to me that the reader has to read forward from Page 2 to Page 26, and then read backward from Page 27 to Page 51.
The document is meant to be printed out. It took me about five minutes to print and bind. First print out the odd pages, feed those pages back into the printer and print the even pages on the other (blank) side. Then fold each page vertically down the middle, arrange them in order, and place three or four staples down the vertical fold.
February 6th, 2010 at 12:13 pm
Social comments and analytics for this post…
This post was mentioned on Reddit by xach: I recommend getting the file directly from http://clqr.berlios.de/ instead of cheatsheetheap.com….
February 6th, 2010 at 2:27 pm
Can you explain how this quick reference is to be read? Page 2 is listed on the same page as Page 51, Page 3 is listed on the same page as Page 50. What is the thinking behind this way of organizing the document? Was it intentional? It appears to me that the reader has to read forward from Page 2 to Page 26, and then read backward from Page 27 to Page 51.
February 6th, 2010 at 3:40 pm
@A. Reader:
The document is meant to be printed out. It took me about five minutes to print and bind. First print out the odd pages, feed those pages back into the printer and print the even pages on the other (blank) side. Then fold each page vertically down the middle, arrange them in order, and place three or four staples down the vertical fold.
February 6th, 2010 at 7:50 pm
Thank you, Chris Simmons. I did not think of the “print on both sides of the sheet of paper” arrangement that you described.