Re multiple return values, you can write (call-with-values (λ () (values 1
2 3)) list)
Because this problem bugs me, I've also written a package adjutor that
includes values->list, list->values, and for/fold/define:
http://docs.racket-lang.org/adjutor/index.html
-Philip
On Wed, Jul 26, 2017 at 3
Hi Gustavo
Nice catch on the in-list front.
I keep forgetting to do this, although I usually remember to use in-range
when iterating from 0 to n-1.
I tend to omit in-list for convenience rather than because I'm writing
generic algorithms. I wonder what the general usage patterns are like.
I gue
I tried query-exec on those SQL strings you posted on gist on my local copy of
Racket 6.8 with an in-memory SQLite3 db and it worked fine.
I'm not sure what's causing your issue. What version of Racket and SQLite3 are
you running on your machine? Is it Windows, Linux, or Mac OSX?
> https://gi
On Wednesday, July 26, 2017 at 11:09:48 AM UTC-4, Matthew Flatt wrote:
> At Wed, 26 Jul 2017 07:54:32 -0700 (PDT), Thomas Dickerson wrote:
> > One more thing: in terms of repeatedly executing scripts, does it make
> > sense
> > to set up and tear down the interpreter every time? Or just swap in a
On Wed, 26 Jul 2017 11:45:25 -0700 (PDT),
cmonbr...@gmail.com wrote:
>First the create table is called and afterwards I execute each insert
>statement. This is what displayln shows as output for sql-create:
>
>https://gist.githubusercontent.com/abramsba/54de32406917e5fb0c480d9c214c3b08/raw/e7c00
On Wednesday, July 26, 2017 at 7:02:42 PM UTC+2, Alexander McLin wrote:
> One more thing for you to check, make sure there's no trailing whitespace
> after the end of your statement's terminating semi-colon, that will also
> trigger the `multiple statements given` error. That bug has been also fi
One more thing for you to check, make sure there's no trailing whitespace after
the end of your statement's terminating semi-colon, that will also trigger the
`multiple statements given` error. That bug has been also fixed in the current
repository.
--
You received this message because you are
It appears you're giving to `query-exec` a string consisting of two statements;
the create table and insert into statements. `query-exec` only supports
executing one statement at a time.
If you break your two statements up into two strings and call `query-exec` on
each one, it should work.
--
Hi Thomas,
I tried following Matthew's suggestions to attach my-lang and use
dynamic-require. Turns out that works pretty well! And then there's
even no need to setup collection path since everything loads from
compiled byte-code.
https://gist.github.com/shhyou/aa2adaf7e1b7d548783cee352c3230a9
Th
At Wed, 26 Jul 2017 07:54:32 -0700 (PDT), Thomas Dickerson wrote:
> One more thing: in terms of repeatedly executing scripts, does it make sense
> to set up and tear down the interpreter every time? Or just swap in a fresh
> namespace?
Between those two options, a fresh namespace is almost certa
Thanks for the help, a couple more quick questions:
On Wednesday, July 26, 2017 at 9:15:12 AM UTC-4, Matthew Flatt wrote:
> You don't have to populate the top-level environment with
> `racket/base`. You could instead use
>
> scheme_namespace_require(scheme_intern_symbol("my-lang"))
>
> where
I came across this post earlier. Does it possibly truncate the amount of
characters that was passed to it? My statements don't have syntax errors, I can
copy and paste them into the SQL console without a problem. Seeing as I'm
looking at somewhere close to around 80.000 records I'd rather automa
I read the solution of Daniel Prager and I have a few minor changes.
* First I added a test that repeats `build-tree` 20 times, so the run
time is approximately 1-2 seconds. This is not necessary, but times
smaller than 1 second are sometimes not reliable. I'm using:
;---
(random-seed 12345)
(defi
At Tue, 25 Jul 2017 19:08:02 -0700 (PDT), Thomas Dickerson wrote:
> On Tuesday, July 25, 2017 at 5:52:45 PM UTC-4, Shu-Hung You wrote:>
> > As we can see,
> `scheme_namespace_require(scheme_intern_symbol("racket/base"));`
> > is actually missing from your setup program. This line requires racket
There's a problem with the sqlite interface where "multiple statements given"
error is reported for any syntax error. This was fixed only recently. See
previous discussion:
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/racket-users/sqlite$20multiple$20statements$20given%7Csort:relevance/racket-us
On Tuesday, July 25, 2017 at 11:37:48 PM UTC+2, Lehi Toskin wrote:
> One thing I'm curious about is what things can you and can you not pack? In
> the README it shows bytes being packed, which seems a little obvious, but
> what about (transparent) structs? Hashes? Lists? I'm very interested in th
Here is what I get from profiling the different dispatch methods in 'unpack'.
First I pack a positive fixnum which is among the first few conditions.
Cond:
cpu time: 810 real time: 3367 gc time: 0
cpu time: 815 real time: 3428 gc time: 0
cpu time: 815 real time: 3197 gc time: 0
On Tuesday, July 25, 2017 at 11:37:48 PM UTC+2, Lehi Toskin wrote:
> One thing I'm curious about is what things can you and can you not pack? In
> the README it shows bytes being packed, which seems a little obvious, but
> what about (transparent) structs? Hashes? Lists? I'm very interested in th
I'm working on converting a number of CSV files into SQLite3 tables. As of now
I export the SQL statements to a text file and import them afterwards.
```
(define (csv->sqlfiles)
(for-each
(λ (e)
(let* ([csv_filepath (string-append csv_dir (path->string e))]
[table_name (pat
Actually, I only use multiple values because that's what for/fold returns.
Is there a way to convert from values to a list without going through
define-values or similar?
Dan
On 26 Jul. 2017 09:40, "Zelphir Kaltstahl"
wrote:
I've come to the conclusion, that not assuming binary classification
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