INTERLISP
INTERLISP is a LISP dialect developed at Xerox PARC from BBN LISP.
INTERLISP-10
The first version of INTERLISP was essentially a renaming of the latest iteration of BBN LISP, which was hosted on PDP-10 computers running TENEX. When built for running on a Maxc, it can use the compact Byte Lisp instruction set provided by that computer.
AltoLisp
The version of INTERLISP running on the Xerox Alto was called AltoLisp. AltoLisp served as a model and departure point for Interlisp-D. - Teitelman and Masinter.
Interlisp-D
INTERLISP was ported to the Xerox D machines, and this version was called Interlisp-D.
According to Larry Masinter: All Interlisp-D machines were microcoded to emulate a bytecode set that evolved only in small ways from the Deutsch design.
Other hosts
INTERLISP was ported to the IBM System/370, CDC 3300, Burroughs B6700, Jericho, PDP-11/40E (not a stock PDP-11; it had hardware and microcode modifications), and VAX.
There is an InterLISP/65 for the Atari 400/800 series. It's most likely a tiny subset of the full language.
External links
- Interlisp Timeline
- Interlisp Reference Manual from 1974
- A LISP Machine with Very Compact Programs, L. Peter Deutsch, 1973.
- LISP-details - INTERLISP 360-370, Anders Haraldsson , 1975.
- Interlisp-VAX: - A Report, Larry Masinter, 1981.
- Interlisp-11, by Alice K. Hartley.
- InterLISP/65.