Roland Kaufmann

I am an electronics engineer and wish I could use Common Lisp for more than just playing. Since I did some minor edits, I created a personal page. At work, I use Matlab, VHDL, C(++), assembly. I also did some literate programming with moderate success (one colleague got hooked on it). I am hosting two small programs, Datoura and ulimyhmpqs written by others. --

TO DO: create pages for cl-num-utils and cl-rmath from Tamas Papp.

-- Rainer Joswig posted the following interesting list of Lisp software related to Statistics on comp.lang.lisp. When I will find the time I will add CLiki pages for them. See also Statistics.

Stats http://compbio.uchsc.edu/Hunter_lab/Hunter/cl-statistics.lisp http://compbio.uchsc.edu/Hunter_lab/Hunter/cl-statistics-doc.txt

Some tools and libs (CLASP, ...) http://www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs/project/ai-repository/ai/lang/lisp/code/math/0.html

http://dan.corlan.net/R_to_common_lisp_translator/

Quantitative analysis in Lisp http://www.stats.uwaterloo.ca/Quail/

image analysis http://www.nist.gov/lispix/MLxDoc/mlx.html

SigLab, signal processing analysis pipeline http://homepage.mac.com/dbmcclain http://www.lispworks.com/success-stories/raytheon-siglab.html

InspireData, data analysis tool http://www.inspiration.com/productinfo/inspiredata/index.cfm

SciGraph, software for graphing numeric data (using CLIM) http://openmap.bbn.com/~kanderso/lisp/scigraph/

http://iridia0.ulb.ac.be/pulcinella/

http://wwww.common-lisp.net/project/cl-graph/

http://common-lisp.net/project/cl-mathstats/

"Arizona": collection of tools supporting scientific computing, ... www.stat.washington.edu/www/research/reports/1988/tr131.pdf

-- common-lisp-stat mentioned by AJ Rossini on c.l.l.


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