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Home/ Questions/Q 8389075
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 9, 20262026-06-09T18:37:28+00:00 2026-06-09T18:37:28+00:00

I’m aware that Common Lisp has different binding environments for functions and variables, but

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I’m aware that Common Lisp has different binding environments for functions and variables, but I believe that it also has another binding environment for tagbody labels. Are there even more binding environments than this? If so, then is it fair to categorize Common Lisp as a Lisp-2?

These question are not meant as pedantry or bike-shedding, I only want to gain a better understanding of Common Lisp and hopefully get some pointers into where to dig deeper into its spec.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-09T18:37:30+00:00Added an answer on June 9, 2026 at 6:37 pm

    I’m aware that Common Lisp has different binding environments for
    functions and variables,

    That would be namespaces, according to the HyperSpec:

    namespace n. 1. bindings whose denotations are restricted to a
    particular kind. The bindings of names to tags is the tag
    namespace.'' 2. any mapping whose domain is a set of names.
    A
    package defines a namespace.”

    (Point 1.)

    but I believe that it also has another binding environment for tagbody
    labels. Are there even more binding environments than this?

    Yes, there are more namespaces. I even remember a little snippet exposing most of them, but unfortunately, I can’t find it anymore¹. It at least exposed variable, function, tag, and block namespaces, but maybe also types and declarations were included. There is also another SO answer that lists these namespaces.

    If so, then is it fair to categorize Common Lisp as a Lisp-2?

    In the comments to the above linked answer, Rainer Joswig agrees that the “general debate is about Lisp-1 against Lisp-n”.

    The “2” might be due to the relative importance of the distinction between value and function slots, or because the objects of the other namespaces aren’t first-class objects. For example in the Gabriel/Pitman paper referenced in the other answer:

    There is really a larger number of namespaces than just the two that
    are discussed here. As we noted earlier, other namespaces include at
    least those of blocks and tags; type names and declaration names are
    often considered namespaces. Thus, the names Lisp1 and Lisp2, which we
    have been using are misleading. The names Lisp5 and Lisp6 might be
    more appropriate.

    and:

    In this paper, there are two namespaces of concern, which we
    shall term the “value namespace” and the “function namespace.” Other
    namespaces include tag names (used by TAGBODY and GO) and block names
    (used by BLOCK and RETURN-FROM), but the objects in the location parts
    of their bindings are not first-class Lisp objects.


    ¹) PAIP, p. 837:

    (defun f (f)
      (block f
        (tagbody
         f (catch 'f
             (if (typep f 'f)
                 (throw 'f (go f)))
             (funcall #'f (get (symbol-value 'f) 'f))))))
    
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