> On the contrary. http://mitpress.mit.edu/sicp/full-text/book/book.html > --Brock Brock -- thanks for this link. I paid $60 for that classic book, and last year, when I swore off computers (for about two weeks), I donated it to the library. Now I can have it back. :-) > If you really want to "look into the face of God" check out > a modern functional programming language: Haskell. See > http://www.haskell.org > > Fritz Fritz: Thanks -- the articles I pointed to talk about Erlang and Haskell but I thought I'd start with Lisp. I think I need to grok Lisp first. > I won't claim to be permanently transformed, but I grok Lisp > (and functional programming in general) fairly well. Joseph -- I may contact you off-list with an occasional question. I will look into Lisp Newbies resources first, of course. > If you're interested in functional programming in general, I find that > learning XSLT (which is a functional language) is both enlightening > and practical, it's also pretty fun, especially with XSL-FO thrown in for grins. Now that *is* insteresting. I bounced hard off XSLT too. I then donated my XSLT books to the library. >:-( The fact that I bounced off both Lisp and XSLT (while doing fine with Python etc) says that there are fundamental concepts which I didn't grasp. I intend to rectify that this time. I will keep XSLT in mind as I go along. One of the links I posted uses XML as the "gateway concept" to grokking lisp. Interesting! > That said, here are a couple books for Lisp that I recall as being acceptable. Thanks for the book details! I use abebooks.com and powells.com for almost all my used book searches. Thanks, everyone, for the advice -- Craig --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss