I'm curious to learn how the authors of HtDP were able to create numbered
exercises that spanned multiple files.
>From reading the low-level Scribble API I'm guessing these were made with
delayed-content or delayed-block, but I am having a hard time understanding
the intricacies of the API.
If
I would like to build an additive synth on Racket, but I can't decide myself
wether I should use SuperCollider, Rsound or Fluxus.
SuperCollider I've used already with Sclang and Haskell, and I admire
it's efficiency, but it has some quirks I dislike (like the order of
execution of UGENs). I tried
Hi George,
> [For those about to object: yes, Scheme has a formal denotational definition
> in contrast to the many languages that are operationally defined by
> (relatively) informal description of behavior combined with a "reference"
> implementation. Consider that Scheme's denotational spec i
There's also the Racket Guide: https://docs.racket-lang.org/guide/
On Thu, Dec 3, 2020 at 8:45 PM Yi Chen wrote:
> Haha, that's for sure. Thanks your suggestion!
> Have a nice day:-)
>
> 在2020年12月4日星期五 UTC+8 上午5:53:36 写道:
>
>> On Thu, Dec 03, 2020 at 02:19:43AM -0800, Yi Chen wrote:
>> > Any su
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