Why Is LISP So Rare in Bioinformatics?

LISP is one of the oldest computer languages and perhaps one of the most influential of the early ones.  Some of the other well-known Eisenhower era languages -- Fortran, COBOL and ALGOL, have certainly left their mark, but LISP and derivatives such as Scheme or Common LISP certainly carries more cachet among"serious" programmers.  COBOL has always been a bit of an easy joke and Fortran tends to mark you as old-school; use of APL (once a language of mine) would mark you as dangerously reactionary.  ALGOL begat Pascal and Modula II and clearly had impact on the C syntax family of languages (including bioinformatics mainstays Python, Perl and Java) As I'll detail below, learning LISP has embarrassingly ended up stuck seemingly permanently on my future plans queue.  But that's also because life never forced the issue:  while LISP has certainly been used in bioinformatics (as coveredin a review from 2016 ) , its mindshare in the community would seem to be very minimal.Read more »
Source: Omics! Omics! - Category: Bioinformatics Authors: Source Type: blogs