@gosha So SICP will give you the tools to approach the Little Schemer and a mindset for it, but not so much the other way around. The little schemer is more like direct problem solving, which is great, but you want to have the technique from SICP to get into it. As for ANSI Common Lisp, it's technical and dry and that could go way down. If you can find a copy of Land Of Lisp, I'd put at as 0.
@neauoire That's very interesting, thank you! My thinking was that The Little Schemer might be more approachable than SICP and that I could use the momentum from it for tackling the bigger book. Might have to revisit that assumption.
The reason ANSI Common Lisp is first is that I had already started on it before I made this plan, so I'm going to try to finish first (and somehow I actually don't find it super dry? I like the way it explains things, and the exercises).
I do have a copy of Land of Lisp (first Lisp book I bought a few years back!) but it somehow didn't work for me. Might have to revisit.
@neauoire That's very interesting, thank you! My thinking was that The Little Schemer might be more approachable than SICP and that I could use the momentum from it for tackling the bigger book. Might have to revisit that assumption.
The reason ANSI Common Lisp is first is that I had already started on it before I made this plan, so I'm going to try to finish first (and somehow I actually don't find it super dry? I like the way it explains things, and the exercises).