@xj9 @pea
what would you say the best way to learn lisp is ?

I assume you can give me one or more references to help me get started
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@ivesen @pea @xj9 consider Emacs editor and elisp as a starting point. The scratch buffer is the perfect lisp interpreter for getting simple syntax concepts down. Then decide what kind of lisp you need to learn. Common Lisp, Guile, even clojure is fun especially if you are already invested in the jvm anyway.

@Absinthe @pea @ivesen oh yeah, parinfer is a must imo. no reason to get frustrated trying to learn paredit or balancing parens manually.
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