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Kent M. Pitman regales us with the history and his history of web server and web implementations with lisp, why lisp indentation is conventionally the way it is with reference to TECO terms, testing in lisp particularly and through the ages.
Kent's A Turn at the Darkness: https://netsettlement.blogspot.com/2014/07/a-turn-at-darkness.html
By Kent M. Pitman regales us with the history and his history of web server and web implementations with lisp, why lisp indentation is conventionally the way it is with reference to TECO terms, testing in lisp particularly and through the ages.
Kent's A Turn at the Darkness: https://netsettlement.blogspot.com/2014/07/a-turn-at-darkness.html