Great article, thanks.
I like the logging facility, now I see it is more powerful than I known.
On Thu, Apr 25, 2019 at 6:25 AM Gustavo Massaccesi
wrote:
> We can extract an feature request from the end of the post:
>
> Make the module that define `set` a cross-phase persistent module, so all
>
We can extract an feature request from the end of the post:
Make the module that define `set` a cross-phase persistent module, so all
the phases can share the `set`s.
Gustavo
On Sun, Apr 21, 2019 at 7:41 AM Alexis King wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I just published a blog post on defeating Racket
Wow! This is is cool.
Also +1 -- since I'm interested in this very topic and curious to know
what's out there.
P.S. You probably already know about wescheme.org, right?
On Tuesday, April 23, 2019 at 5:17:40 AM UTC-7, Stephen De Gabrielle wrote:
>
> Hi
>
> I found that you can run DrRacket on
Okay, thanks. I wonder if this is a problem space that the sql module
could fit into? Perhaps tag the fields with wrapper functions.
Regardless, I've found a clean way around it by looping through a smart
struct defined using the struct-plus-plus module.
#lang at-exp racket
(require struct-plu
I'm aware, and that's what I intended to do. There's the excellent
pmap package which uses futures, but I wanted threads for concurrency on
one CPU. It works very well for launching processes and getting the
returns all at once.
Dex
On 2019-04-24 6:09 p.m., Robby Findler wrote:
Thanks for
Thanks for working on this, but Racket's `thread` construct is not
parallel (in the sense that you will not see more than one CPU active
on your machine at a time with code that uses `thread`).
Check out places and futures for alternatives that do support parallelism.
Robby
On Wed, Apr 24, 2019
Hi folks,
I made concurrent (multi-threaded) versions of map, andmap and
for-each for Racket:
https://github.com/DexterLagan/pmap
Because I'm a little slow and lazy, I haven't checked packages for a
proper version.
If this isn't too much asking, can somebody give me some feedback?
T
This is epic. Can we get more like this? It's giving me ideas for plot
hooks in my next novel.
On Wed, Apr 24, 2019 at 11:19 AM wrote:
> A product has been placed in my body (resembling a gadget well known to
> the general public, but very different) that can be used to locate me,
> listen to
Yep, thanks. I've been using RETURNING pretty extensively to get not just
the ID but other fields as well. It's ridiculously convenient.
Unfortunately, I'm migrating to SQLite now and they don't support RETURNING
so I was trying to use the simple-result struct. I'm not sure why I used a
Pg conne
> > (require db)
> > (define db (postgresql-connect ...args...))
> > (simple-result-info (query db "insert into collaborations (name) values
> ('foojalskdsfls')"))
> '((insert-id . #f) (affected-rows . 1))
>
With postgresql instead of doing a plain insert you can use returning to
return your
A product has been placed in my body (resembling a gadget well known to the
general public, but very different) that can be used to locate me, listen
to me, etc. A Canadian company, for criminal reasons, used this technique
to try to kill me by piercing my heart.
This company has corrupted seve
Thanks
On Tuesday, April 23, 2019 at 10:12:00 PM UTC+3, Stefan Schmiedl wrote:
>
>
> "orenpa11" >, 23.04.2019, 20:53:
>
> > Hi
> > I am using the functionprintBoard board (DrRacket Pretty Big)
> >
> > (printBoard '((0 0 2 0) (0 0 0 0) (0 0 8 0) (0 0 0 0)))
> > and the result is
> >
Instead of a new `#%q-expression` form, I think there's potential to use
`#%datum` or `quote` itself for this. Potentially, the only thing that
makes numbers (for instance) special is that the reader, printer, IDE, and
bytecode systems already know what module(s) the number structure type(s)
co
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