Ok, thanks, should I create patches for these cases - there are some in the
declarations? Anyway I wonder how guile could accept these.
Bert
> --- Original Message ---
> From: Nicolas Sceaux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Bertalan Fodor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: 08/01/23/, 21:45:25
> Subjec
Le 23 janv. 08 à 21:08, Bertalan Fodor a écrit :
Yes, it's a vector, but is it a standalone expression?
The guile page says:
Like lists, vectors have to be quoted:
'#(a b c) => #(a b c)
Indeed, my mistake. The examples later on the guile documentation
use quoted sharp-paren expressions.
Yes, it's a vector, but is it a standalone expression?
The guile page says:
Like lists, vectors have to be quoted:
'#(a b c) => #(a b c)
> --- Original Message ---
> From: Nicolas Sceaux <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: Bertalan Fodor (LilyPondTool) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: 08/01/23/, 2
Le 23 janv. 08 à 16:26, Bertalan Fodor (LilyPondTool) a écrit :
Hi,
in property-init.ly I found this: aikenHeads = \set shapeNoteStyles
= ##(do re mi fa #f la ti)
That seems to be a vector definition in Scheme: #(do re mi fa #f la
ti)
However, it is not a valid Scheme expression, at least
Hi,
in property-init.ly I found this: aikenHeads = \set shapeNoteStyles =
##(do re mi fa #f la ti)
That seems to be a vector definition in Scheme: #(do re mi fa #f la ti)
However, it is not a valid Scheme expression, at least according to its
formal grammar and the online Scheme interpreter,