This is (for now) the end~~~

Last time, I said that I'm on a BAST grind. So what? Was I grinding up 'til now? No, I finished (abruptly ended) the project short after the post (maybe, I don't really do time). But, as I might have mentioned, I don't really know at this point, I submitted the language for a school project and I was waiting until it gets approved, since I didn't want to proclaim it as over and then post followup about a simple documentation change or something. Then some things happened and the teacher had better things to do and something else happened, since people like threes...

Anyways, it got accepted, so I herby proclaim it finished-for-now. I kinda gave up on most things, so consider it more-or-less just a demo of what could have been, was I a half decent hacker.

If you happen to enjoy reading useless documentation, the full language walkthrough and example algorithms are available in the repo (current commit: 56b35a9e21b858741eae78167dba1d477ed79051)

Now that I think about it, I'm not exactly sure what to say here that I have not already said in the previous post, or in the doc, so...

IDK, I just want to leave and forget that this happened and never come back and I just want to do some LISP man... I'll just go to do some school now. I'll return one day (hopefully), just probably to a different project.

Here, enjoy a free lore stolen from Wikipedia instead:

Microsoft once included a version of the Korn shell produced by Mortice Kern Systems (MKS) in a UNIX integration package for Windows NT. This version was not compatible with ksh88 (a Korn shell specification), and Korn mentioned this during a question and answer period of a Microsoft presentation during a USENIX NT conference in Seattle in 1998. Greg Sullivan, a Microsoft product manager who was participating in the presentation, not knowing who the commenter was, insisted that Microsoft had indeed chosen a "real" Korn shell. A polite debate ensued, with Sullivan continuing to insist that the man giving the criticisms was mistaken about the compatibility issues. Sullivan only backed down when an audience member stood up and mentioned that the man making the comments was none other than the eponymous David Korn.