Subject:
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Re: Scheme
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Newsgroups:
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lugnet.robotics
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Date:
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Tue, 11 May 1999 16:12:07 GMT
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Original-From:
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Alex Wetmore <alex@[StopSpam]phred.org>
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Viewed:
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1192 times
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From: Joel Shafer <joel@connect.net>
> Could you give a brief description of scheme? I've heard that it is a
> fairly high level language and I know that a compiler or interpreter exists
> for it on linux.
http://www.scheme.org/
In my view Scheme is the most useful subset of lisp, designed to make a
small, elegant, functional language. This is compared to Common Lisp, which
is kind of a superset of the various lisp-dialects, meant to contain
everything.
Note: I am not a lisp-expert, I just used Scheme in one of my university
classes, and have played around with Common-lisp a little bit. I would
probably recommend playing around with PbForth on the RCX. Forth is a
lightweight, interpreted, stack-based language. It doesn't have lambda
functions (I don't think it does at least), but has a similar sort of
environment to most scheme systems (you can type directly into the
interpreter).
alex
--
Did you check the web site first?: http://www.crynwr.com/lego-robotics
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Message has 1 Reply: | | Re: Scheme
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| It strikes me that Scheme is largely an academic language. Granted, there are a few Scheme devotees out there who worship the language, but they seem to be all at MIT or Rice. I think they've even written modules for web programming with Scheme, but (...) (26 years ago, 11-May-99, to lugnet.robotics)
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Message is in Reply To:
| | Re: Scheme
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| Could you give a brief description of scheme? I've heard that it is a fairly high level language and I know that a compiler or interpreter exists for it on linux. (...) -- Did you check the web site first?: (URL) (26 years ago, 11-May-99, to lugnet.robotics)
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