As an example, I want have most of the functions for Plus, Minus already written.
Here is the code for it. (define (plus num1 num2) (+ num1 num2)) That is childs stuff... Here is where I am having the problem, and please keep in mind I am new to DrRacket... If my program accepts input such as (plus 13 5) I need to parse it so that I know what it is asking for. If It is a left parent, then I need to move on, if it is a right parent, move on to the next character, once i get to the next character I can see it is an alphanumeric character, but then I need to somehow read the whole word, so that I can store that value in a variable so that I can read the next number. If the numbers are single digits, it is easy, because they are only one charater each and read-char works perfect, but I need something like a read-word, or read-number and I can't seem to figure out how to do it. So really I need to know how do I read the words when there are characters present, and read the whole numbers when there is a number present. On 9 November 2010 15:00, John Clements <cleme...@brinckerhoff.org> wrote: > > On Nov 9, 2010, at 11:48 AM, Peter Breitsprecher wrote: > > > I am in the process of writing a simple scheme interpreter for a class I > have. I am running into an issue with regards to parsing the input > properly. I will try and explain what I want to do and tell me if I am way > off base or not. I have a procedure set up to read the input from the user. > Which is just a simple display read function. I want to pass that read > value in, and then read it character by character. If it is a "(" then up a > counter(to make sure there is an equal number of ")", if it is a number, i > want to read the number and store it into a variable, and if it is an > operator I want to pass the variables to the proper functions I have written > to evaluate the input. > > > > I'm really stuck at step 2... I can read the input, however I can't seem > to pass that input to another function and then break it down character by > character.. I thought read-char should do it, but it only seems to work if > it is in the function to read the input.. and it doesn't seem to work if > passed to another function.. > > I understand your big picture, but I have no idea what kinds of functions > you're trying to write. Can you describe the function you're trying to > write in one line, then specify what it takes and what it returns, and > provide a few examples of what you expect it to produce on certain inputs? > > In the book "How To Design Programs", these are the first few steps of the > "Design Recipe," and it sounds like they would help you clarify what it is > you're trying to do. > > All the best, > > John Clements > > -- Kurt Breitsprecher (807) 474-9601 pkbre...@lakeheadu.ca
_________________________________________________ For list-related administrative tasks: http://lists.racket-lang.org/listinfo/users