From ... From: Erik Naggum Subject: Re: HTML text of CLTL2? Date: 1995/05/06 Message-ID: <19950506T100059Z.enag@naggum.no>#1/1 X-Deja-AN: 102126204 references: <799409360snz@wildcard.demon.co.uk> <3oanv5$gtr@news.tuwien.ac.at> organization: Naggum Software; +47 2295 0313 newsgroups: uk.lisp,comp.lang.lisp [Clemens Heitzinger] | Having read the URLs of cltl2, I wonder how I can download ALL the | htmls that belong to it. I have tried ftp, but obviously they don't | allow anonymous access. It would be great if somebody had a tar-file | with the whole html-version of cltl2. [Simon Brooke] | Gosh, yes, wouldn't that be useful? I bet the reason that you can't is | that it's copyright, and somebody (GS?) wants to make a living out of | it (after all it took a great deal of work to put it together). | However, I think I'd much rather pay UKP 40 to have html on CD-ROM than | to have plain text on paper. what utter baloney! the book was released to the public right before the standard was finalized. by Guy Steele himself, as far as I remember. if this doesn't say "I don't think it's right to charge money for a book that is no longer the authoritative reference", I don't know what it says. the LaTeX source files are available from cambridge.apple.com, and I got the HTML files from Mark Kantrowitz. I can't find an FTPable source for the HTML files, anymore, but this is now publicly accessible. I have both the HTML and the original LaTeX distribution files spinning on my disks. if you want it, I'm sure Mark wouldn't object to shipping copies around as long as he can have URL's to add to his mirror list. let me know, and I'll make them available. # -- sufficiently advanced political correctness is indistinguishable from sarcasm