I would say that the stuff in HtDP is teaching you the fundamentals of
programming; it isn't (about) teaching you a specific programming language.
These fundamentals apply to any programming language you might wish to
program in. And, of course, the book does use a (set of) languages to teach
you, but that's more about having something so that you can practice than
it is about teaching you the specifics of BSL.

If your goal is to learn how to program, just in general, I think HtDP is
the book for you. If your goal is something else, then HtDP may not be for
you.

I should also add that I think that the learning the fundamentals of how to
program is a wonderful thing and I am very happy that I have learned them.
It is even better than my job overlaps with my favorite hobby (which
happens to be programming); I consider myself extremely lucky because of
that!

best,
Robby


On Tue, Jul 13, 2021 at 10:12 AM joseph turco <italian.pepe...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> I see. The stuff in HtDP, does it transfer over to any Racket syntax?
>
> On Tue, Jul 13, 2021 at 10:56 AM George Neuner <gneun...@comcast.net>
> wrote:
>
>>
>> On 7/13/2021 10:13 AM, joseph turco wrote:
>>
>> Hello,
>>
>> Im am looking at learning a programming language, and have been
>> bouncing around with scheme/racket/dyalog APL/squeak. upon investigation of
>> scheme and racket, i found that in regards to racket, there really isn't a
>> "Beginners book" that teaches the language. The only beginner book i could
>> really see being close to teaching the language is HtDP, but that doesn't
>> *technically* teach racket, but BSL. For scheme, im able to find
>> beginner books, unless im not looking deep enough. Maybe if you fine folk
>> don't mind pointing me in the right direction? Please excuse my ignorance.
>>
>> -- Joseph T
>>
>>
>> Welcome.
>>
>> Racket[*] largely is based on Scheme, and so much of what you learn about
>> Scheme will transfer.  Racket supports R5RS and R6RS Scheme as legacy
>> languages, so you can learn about Scheme /using/ Racket and its tools.
>> Then when you are more comfortable, you can transition to using the Racket
>> module language instead.
>>
>> George
>> [*]  At least the untyped Racket language.  Racket really is a /suite/ of
>> languages: there also is a typed Racket, a lazy Racket, and various DSLs
>> (domain languages) which compile to and (mostly) freely intermix with
>> Racket.
>>
>> --
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