in your .sbclrc (or whatever the equivalent is for your implementation) and never have to see all-caps again.
And yeah, the default upcasing is ugly and inelegant, but they were trying to support the caps-only machines & code still in use at the time. It’s one of the key things I’d change in a modern Lisp standard.
But you have to admit: when the default print-case is one of the worst things in a language, that language is doing pretty well.
TIL! Thanks for pointing this out; it makes me feel much better than my previous assumption that all these people running around proclaiming the greatness of CL were just _okay_ with the allcaps!
Perhaps, like beer, it is a taste that I have yet to acquire, especially if it is as useful as it sounds for differentiating user input from machine messages/feedback :)
And yeah, the default upcasing is ugly and inelegant, but they were trying to support the caps-only machines & code still in use at the time. It’s one of the key things I’d change in a modern Lisp standard.
But you have to admit: when the default print-case is one of the worst things in a language, that language is doing pretty well.
in your .sbclrc (or whatever the equivalent is for your implementation) and never have to see all-caps again.