Pydoc equivalent for Common Lisp [closed] - documentation

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I've been programming in common lisp for a while now, and I like how there's so much handy documentation on the language online; the problem is that I'm often offline and can't access it when I need it most.
Is there a PyDoc equivalent for common lisp (or even just man pages for the language) that I can download and use in the shell?
Cheers in advance.

You can download the CLHS and install it in various ways.
http://www.cliki.net/CLHS

that's an old question…
edit: as referenced on the Cookbook, we can read the HyperSpecs offline with either Dash (MacOS), Zeal (GNU/Linux) or Velocity (Windows).
we could ask or add it on devdocs: https://devdocs.io/
and take the data of the CL Ultra Spec: website, data
and of course browse the built-in documentation with Emacs (C-h, see the menu).

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What are the spell correct api's available? [closed]

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I wanted to know the spell correct api's available for commercial/non commercial usage other than google/bing.
First of all you can write your own spell corrector with this tutorial. In addition there are some Python packages that may help you with that, such as TextBlob (which I highly recommend). Another option is Gingerit which Iv'e never tried but looks promising. Another DIY spell correct tutorial might interest you as well.
https://www.gigablast.com/spellcheckapi.html
I just launched this, so it's still beta, but it's not bad. It has a dictionary of over 600,000,000 entries covering most non-Asian languages.

Standards for commandline options documentation [closed]

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I often hack out some Thor, Rake, Bash or even PHP commandline tools. And I want to document the command-line-arguments and variations in a consistent way.
Is there an official, or recommended standard on this documentation?
Like when an option is optional[--foo=bar], or when an option can be one n-values ("yes|no"), etceteras.
I'd rather not come up with my own standard, when there is an official (POSIX?) standard or guide that already lists the do's and don't for documenting tools and applications on CLI's.
I'm not sure what output format you have in mind, but why not use the man-page style? It seems a nice fit for commandline tools.

Summary/reference documentation on Scala standard library types [closed]

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Details on the packages/types is in the Scala API documentation on scala-lang.org. But that's organised by class and I (as a Scala neophyte) find it difficult to locate the exact data type I need and work out what operation are supported on what (especially in the huge and powerful scala.collections.* tree).
Is there an online or dead-tree resource that either presents this reference information more usably, or guides the reader through the library?
Alternatively, maybe I just need to be informed how to use the existing Scala API doc website more effectively.
Any advice on effective use of the standard Scala library gratefully received!
For the collections in particular, there's a very good overview available here: http://www.scala-lang.org/docu/files/collections-api/collections.html
Written by Martin Odersky himself :)

clojure.lang, etc. api [closed]

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Are the JavaDocs for clojure.lang, etc. available online? Do I need to build it myself from the Clojure source?
Thanks.
if you want descriptions for functions and even examples, visit ClojureDocs
you can even contribute ;)
Javadocs don't exist, per se. If you look at the Java source code, it's very sparsely documented. Certainly you could generate a skeleton yourself, but it probably wouldn't be all that useful anyway as much of the language is self-implemented (in clojure), using Java mostly for bootstrapping the core functionality. I don't think clojure.lang package is really intended to be used directly.
To learn about Clojure functions you can:
Use (doc) and (find-doc) from a repl
Use the API reference at clojure.org
See ClojureDocs, per #Belun's answer

Good sites/blogs for FPGA development projects [closed]

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I'm looking for interesting online resources on FPGA development - sites, blogs, that sort of thing. What I'm after is examples of fun (and hopefully not too expensive) projects that one can try out and learn from.
have you tried fpga4fun.com or fpga-forum.com?
Also mikrocontroller.net (altough in german) has a linklist.
John Kent's site is a good starting point.
Try opencores.org - it hosts open source projects.
Great site with interesting projects and articles
http://www.fpga4fun.com/
I've compiled a list of FPGA Online Resources. Check link
fpga-blog.tumblr.com/links