On my show this week I am looking at a few people's Common Lisp mathematical packages (including mine).
So far, I am the only one I am seeing using :package-inferred-system . François-René Rideau 's style guide
https://github.com/fare/asdf/blob/master/doc/best_practices.md#package_inferred simply echoes the ASDF manual on it (or vice versa) as a thing you could do.
The practical difference I have found is recompiling and reloading changed files within one lisp image using :force t
(asdf:operate 'asdf:load-op "my-system/src/changed-package-file" :force t)
Instead of restarting my lisp. (without force, an already loaded package won't be recompiled and reloaded, it will just be left alone)
To some extent it is also an encouragement to use the feature rich uiop:define-package and corrollary support for understanding dependencies between files/packages in a given asdf system, though uiop:define-package can be subbed for 'defpackage without using :package-inferred-system .
What's your call / experience here ?
I guess this is like telling people crammed into a cubicle farm office that air conditioning is bad, and then being banned by an air-conditioner-repair-person. The fact that they're chained to an office with stale, mouldy air implies more than one thing has gone wrong.