Hi DracoSentien...
Quote:
P.S. Sorry, for going off topic with LISP but this guy already dived in head deep with making an Oscillograph with PERL so I decided to make this post for other readers who are interested in cybersecurity and also make the moral of the story that trendy new shiny languages are not always better although I am not denigrating Python here.
I assume you mean me, I jump in at the deep end with something like Oscillo[scopes/graphs] as I know far more about measuring gear than programming so I know what I want from the language.
I did al[l]sorts using Python from versions 1.4.0 to 3.7.4 and now include 3.8.0.
Python is soooo easy that I now dedicate my Python code to work for the AMIGA Python 1.4.0 to 3.8.0 on __all__ platforms.
This is my 'pièce de résistance' all hosted on this site, in case you have never seen it, I wanted to learn bash and it is a huge read and the ADMIN allowed it to be hosted here:
The Start Of A Simple Audio Scope Shell Script...
AND follows on here:
AudioScope Project.
I have a much later version but not uploaded yet but the thread can remain closed until I am ready.
You might like this in pure ksh93, a Discrete Fourier Transform, oh the pleasure of floating point:
DFT using pure ksh ONLY!
I don't think you will ever see anything like these anywhere else, and I still haven't found the limits of bash yet, and certainly not ksh93!
As for LISP, I watched several episodes of this whilst at work, (shhhh), and got a mild grasp of the language, this is the very first video, MIT:
YouTube