This package provides a port of the sweet expression reader, originally written by David Wheeler, to Racket.
To use the package, you have several options.
-
With Racket 5.3.2 or later, you can install the package using
raco pkg
:raco pkg install sweet-exp
- set your language to
#lang sweet-exp <your-base-language>
-
You can also use Planet 2 package management manually:
git clone git://github.com/takikawa/sweet-racket.git
raco pkg install sweet-racket/sweet-exp-lib/
-
With Racket 5.3.1 and earlier, you can use the Planet package.
- set your language to
#lang planet asumu/sweet <your-base-language>
- set your language to
Note: the check syntax tool does work with this language, but it may fail to activate when you first install it from PLaneT. Changing the #lang line and then trying again should cause the check syntax button to appear.
This package is released under the MIT license under the same terms as the original implementation.
The following is an excerpt from the Scribble manual for this package. The
package provides the sweet reader as a language mixin, similar to the at-exp
or s-exp
modules.
#lang sweet-exp
To use sweet expressions, supply a #lang
line like the following:
#lang sweet-exp racket
printf("Hello")
The third parameter on the #lang
line is the base language used by the
language mixin. The resulting language will use the bindings from the
base language, but support sweet expression syntax. You can provide any
language here such as racket
, typed/racket
, or others.
For example:
#lang sweet-exp typed/racket
define: fact([n : Integer]) : Integer
if zero?(n)
1
{n * fact{n - 1}}
Or alternatively:
#lang sweet-exp lazy
define fibs
cons 0 cons(1 map(+ fibs cdr(fibs)))
displayln list-ref(fibs 8)
Known issues: quasi-quotation combined with grouping does not behave according to the specification.