from
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (8 July 2008)
siod
<language> (Scheme In One Defun or Scheme In One Day)
A small {Scheme} implementation in {C} by George Carrette
<[email protected]>, <[email protected]>. SIOD is arranged as a
set of subroutines that can be called from any main program
for the purpose of introducing an interpreted extension
language. It compiles to 20 kbytes of executable
({VAX}/{VMS}). {Lisp} calls {C} and C calls Lisp
transparently.
SIOD supports symbols, strings, {arrays}, {hash coding}, file
i/o (binary, text, seek), data save/restore in binary and
text, interface to commercial {databases} such {Oracle} and
{Digital} {RDB}.
Version 3.0 runs on {VAX}/{VMS},{Unix}, {Sun-3}, {Sun-4},
{Amiga}, {Macintosh}, {MIPS}, {Cray}, {ALPHA}/{VMS}, {Windows
NT} and {OS/2}. It can be compiled by most {ANSI C} compilers
and {C++} compilers, e.g. {gcc} -Wall.
(ftp://world.std.com/pub/gjc/),
(ftp://world.std.com/src/lisp/).
Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.lang.scheme.
(1994-02-18)