This chapter describes Scheme’s (rnrs base (6))library, which exports many of the procedure and syntax bindings that are traditionally associated with Scheme.
Section 9.21 defines the rules that identify tail calls and tail contexts in base-library constructs.
All identifiers described in the entries of this chapter are exported by the (rnrs base (6)) library with level 0, with the exception of syntax-rules, identifier-syntax, which are exported with level 1. In addition, the identifiers unquote, unquote-splicing, =>, elseare exported with level 0, and the identifiers ...and _are exported with level 1. A reference to any of these identifiers out of place is a syntax violation. The identifier set! (section 9.5.4) is exported at both levels 0 and 1.
No object satisfies more than one of the following predicates:
boolean? pair?
These predicates define the base types boolean, pair, symbol, number, char (or character), string, vector, and procedure. Moreover, the empty list is a special object of its own type.
Note that, although there is a separate boolean type, any Scheme value can be used as a boolean value for the purpose of a conditional test; see section 4.6.
Definitionsmay appear within a <top-level body> (section 7.1), at the top of a <library body> (section 6.1), or at the top of a <body> (section 9.4).
A <definition> may be a variable definition (section 9.3.1 or keyword definition (section 9.3.1. Syntactic abstractions that expand into definitions or groups of definitions (packaged in a base-library begin, let-syntax, or letrec-syntax form; see section 9.5.7) may also appear wherever other definitions may appear.
The define form described in this section is a <definition>used to create variable bindings and may appear anywhere other definitions may appear.
The first from of define binds <variable> to a new location before assigning the value of <expression> to it.
(define add3The continuation of <expression> should not be invoked more than once.
Implementation responsibilities: Implementations are not required to detect that the continuation of <expression> is invoked more than once. If the implementation detects this, it must raise an exception with condition type &assertion.
The second form of define is equivalent to
(define <variable> <unspecified>)where <unspecified> is a side-effect-free expression returning an unspecified value.
In the third form of define, <formals> must be either a sequence of zero or more variables, or a sequence of one or more variables followed by a space-delimited period and another variable (as in a lambda expression, see section 9.5.2). This form is equivalent to
(define <variable>In the fourth form of define, <formal> must be a single variable. This form is equivalent to
(define <variable>
The define-syntax form described in this section is a <definition>used to create keyword bindings and may appear anywhere other definitions may appear.
Binds <keyword> to the value of <expression>, which must evaluate, at macro-expansion time, to a transformer (see library section on “Transformers”).
Keyword bindings established by define-syntax are visible throughout the body in which they appear, except where shadowed by other bindings, and nowhere else, just like variable bindings established by define. All bindings established by a set of definitions, whether keyword or variable definitions, are visible within the definitions themselves.
Implementation responsibilities: The implementation must check that the value of <expression> is a transformer when the evaluation produces a value.
For example:
(let ()
An implication of the left-to-right processing order (section 8) is that one definition can affect whether a subsequent form is also a definition. For example, the expression
(let ()
The behavior is unaffected by any binding for bind-to-zero that might appear outside of the let expression.
The <body> of a lambda, let, let*, let-values, let*-values, letrec, letrec* expression or that of a definition with a body consists of zero or more definitions followed by one or more expressions.
<definition> ... <expression1> <expression2> ...
Each identifier defined by a definition is local to the <body>. That is, the identifier is bound, and the region of the binding is the entire <body> (see section 4.2). For example,
(let ((x 5))
When base-library begin, let-syntax, or letrec-syntax forms occur in a body prior to the first expression, they are spliced into the body; see section 9.5.7. Some or all of the body, including portions wrapped in begin, let-syntax, or letrec-syntax forms, may be specified by a syntactic abstraction (see section 6.3.2).
An expanded <body> (see chapter 8) containing variable definitions can always be converted into an equivalent letrec* expression. For example, the let expression in the above example is equivalent to
(let ((x 5))
The entries in this section describe the expressions of the base language, which may occur in the position of the <expression> syntactic variable. The expressions also include the primitive expression types: constant literals, variable references, and procedure calls, as described in section 6.3.1.
Syntax: <Datum> should be a syntactic datum.
Semantics: (quote <datum>) evaluates to the datum value denoted by <datum> (see section 3.3). This notation is used to include constants, including list and vector constants, in Scheme code.
(quote a) ⇒ a
As noted in section 3.3.5, (quote <datum>) may be abbreviated as ’<datum>:
’"abc" ⇒ "abc"
As noted in section 4.8, constants are immutable.
Syntax: <Formals> must be a formal arguments list as described below, and <body> must be as described in section 9.4.
Semantics: A lambda expression evaluates to a procedure. The environment in effect when the lambda expression is evaluated is remembered as part of the procedure. When the procedure is later called with some actual arguments, the environment in which the lambda expression was evaluated is extended by binding the variables in the formal argument list to fresh locations, and the resulting actual argument values are stored in those locations. Then, the expressions in the body of the lambda expression (which may contain definitions and thus represent a letrec* form, see section 9.4) are evaluated sequentially in the extended environment. The results of the last expression in the body are returned as the results of the procedure call.
(lambda (x) (+ x x)) ⇒ a procedure
<Formals> must have one of the following forms:
(<variable1> ...): The procedure takes a fixed number of arguments; when the procedure is called, the arguments are stored in the bindings of the corresponding variables.
<variable>: The procedure takes any number of arguments; when the procedure is called, the sequence of actual arguments is converted into a newly allocated list, and the list is stored in the binding of the <variable>.
(<variable1> ... <variablen> . <variablen+1>): If a space-delimited period precedes the last variable, then the procedure takes n or more arguments, where n is the number of formal arguments before the period (there must be at least one). The value stored in the binding of the last variable is a newly allocated list of the actual arguments left over after all the other actual arguments have been matched up against the other formal arguments.
((lambda x x) 3 4 5 6) ⇒ (3 4 5 6)
It is a syntax violation for a <variable> to appear more than once in <formals>.
Syntax: <Test>, <consequent>, and <alternate> must be expressions.
Semantics: An if expression is evaluated as follows: first, <test> is evaluated. If it yields a true value(see section 4.6), then <consequent> is evaluated and its values are returned. Otherwise <alternate> is evaluated and its values are returned. If <test> yields #f and no <alternate> is specified, then the result of the expression is unspecified.
(if (> 3 2) ’yes ’no) ⇒ yes
The <consequent> and <alternate> expressions are in tail context if the if expression itself is; see section 9.21.
<Expression> is evaluated, and the resulting value is stored in the location to which <variable> is bound. <Variable> must be bound either in some regionenclosing the set! expression or at the top level of a library body. The result of the set! expression is unspecified.
(let ((x 2))
It is a syntax violation if <variable> refers to an immutable binding.
Syntax: Each <cond clause> must be of the form
(<test> <expression1> ...)where <test> is any expression. Alternatively, a <cond clause> may be of the form
(<test> => <expression>)The last <cond clause> may be an “else clause”, which has the form
(else <expression1> <expression2> ...).Semantics: A cond expression is evaluated by evaluating the <test> expressions of successive <cond clause>s in order until one of them evaluates to a true value(see section 4.6). When a <test> evaluates to a true value, then the remaining <expression>s in its <cond clause> are evaluated in order, and the results of the last <expression> in the <cond clause> are returned as the results of the entire cond expression. If the selected <cond clause> contains only the <test> and no <expression>s, then the value of the <test> is returned as the result. If the selected <cond clause> uses the => alternate form, then the <expression> is evaluated. Its value must be a procedure. This procedure should accept one argument; it is called on the value of the <test> and the values returned by this procedure are returned by the cond expression. If all <test>s evaluate to #f, and there is no else clause, then the result of the conditional expression is unspecified; if there is an else clause, then its <expression>s are evaluated, and the values of the last one are returned.
(cond ((> 3 2) ’greater)
For <cond clauses> that use the forms
(<test> <expression1> ...)(else <expression1> <expression2> ...).the last <expression> is in tail context if the cond form itself is; see section 9.21.
A sample definition of cond in terms of simpler forms is in appendix B.
Syntax: <Key> must be an expression. Each <case clause> must have one of the following forms:
((<datum1> ...) <expression1> <expression2> ...)The second form, which specifies an “else clause”, may only appear as the last <case clause>. Each <datum> is an external representation of some object. The data denoted by the <datum>s need not be distinct.
Semantics: A case expression is evaluated as follows. <Key> is evaluated and its result is compared against the data denoted by the <datum>s of each <case clause> in turn, proceeding in order from left to right through the set of clauses. If the result of evaluating <key> is equivalent (in the sense of eqv?; see section 9.6) to a datum of a <case clause>, the corresponding <expression>s are evaluated from left to right and the results of the last expression in the <case clause> are returned as the results of the case expression. Otherwise, the comparison process continues. If the result of evaluating <key> is different from every datum in each set, then if there is an else clause its expressions are evaluated and the results of the last are the results of the case expression; otherwise the result of the case expression is unspecified.
(case (* 2 3)
The last <expression> of a <case clause> is in tail context if the case expression itself is; see section 9.21.
Syntax: The <test>s must be expressions.
Semantics: If there are no <test>s, #t is returned. Otherwise, the <test> expressions are evaluated from left to right until a <test> returns #f or the last <test> is reached. In the former case, the and expression returns #f without evaluating the remaining expressions. In the latter case, the last expression is evaluated and its values are returned.
(and (= 2 2) (> 2 1)) ⇒ #t
The and keyword could be defined in terms of if using syntax-rules (see section 9.20) as follows:
(define-syntax and
The last <test> expression is in tail context if the and expression itself is; see section 9.21.
Syntax: The <test>s must be expressions.
Semantics: If there are no <test>s, #f is returned. Otherwise, the <test> expressions are evaluated from left to right until a <test> returns a true value val (see section 4.6) or the last <test> is reached. In the former case, the or expression returns val without evaluating the remaining expressions. In the latter case, the last expression is evaluated and its values returned.
(or (= 2 2) (> 2 1)) ⇒ #t
The or keyword could be defined in terms of if using syntax-rules (see section 9.20) as follows:
(define-syntax or
The last <test> expression is in tail context if the or expression itself is; see section 9.21.
The binding constructs described in this section give Scheme a block structure, like Algol 60. The syntax of the constructs let, let*, letrec, and letrec* is identical, but they differ in the regions(see section 4.2) they establish for their variable bindings. In a let expression, the initial values are computed before any of the variables become bound; in a let* expression, the bindings and evaluations are performed sequentially. In a letrec or letrec* expression, all the bindings are in effect while their initial values are being computed, thus allowing mutually recursive definitions. In a letrec expression, the initial values are computed before being assigned to the variables; in a letrec*, the evaluations and assignments are performed sequentially.
In addition, the binding constructs let-values and let*-values generalize let and let* to allow multiple variables to be bound to the results of expressions that evaluate to multiple values. They are analogous to let and let* in the way they establish regions: in a let-values expression, the initial values are computed before any of the variables become bound; in a let*-values expression, the bindings are performed sequentially.
Note: These forms are compatible with SRFI 11 [13].
Syntax: <Bindings> must have the form
((<variable1> <init1>) ...),where each <init> is an expression, and <body> is as described in section 9.4. It is a syntax violation for a <variable> to appear more than once in the list of variables being bound.
Semantics: The <init>s are evaluated in the current environment (in some unspecified order), the <variable>s are bound to fresh locations holding the results, the <body> is evaluated in the extended environment, and the values of the last expression of <body> are returned. Each binding of a <variable> has <body> as its region.
(let ((x 2) (y 3))
See also named let, section 9.17.
Syntax: <Bindings> must have the form
((<variable1> <init1>) ...),where each <init> is an expression, and <body> is as described in section 9.4.
Semantics: The let* form is similar to let, but the <init>s are evaluated and bindings created sequentially from left to right, with the regionof each binding including the bindings to its right as well as <body>. Thus the second <init> is evaluated in an environment in which the first binding is visible and initialized, and so on.
(let ((x 2) (y 3))
Note: While the variables bound by a let expression must be distinct, the variables bound by a let* expression need not be distinct.
The let* keyword could be defined in terms of let using syntax-rules (see section 9.20) as follows:
(define-syntax let*
Syntax: <Bindings> must have the form
((<variable1> <init1>) ...),where each <init> is an expression, and <body> is as described in section 9.4. It is a syntax violation for a <variable> to appear more than once in the list of variables being bound.
Semantics: The <variable>s are bound to fresh locations, the <init>s are evaluated in the resulting environment (in some unspecified order), each <variable> is assigned to the result of the corresponding <init>, the <body> is evaluated in the resulting environment, and the values of the last expression in <body> are returned. Each binding of a <variable> has the entire letrec expression as its region, making it possible to define mutually recursive procedures.
(letrec ((even?
One restriction on letrec is very important: it should be possible to evaluate each <init> without assigning or referring to the value of any <variable>. The restriction is necessary because Scheme passes arguments by value rather than by name. In the most common uses of letrec, all the <init>s are lambda expressions and the restriction is satisfied automatically. Another restriction is that the continuation of each <init> should not be invoked more than once.
Implementation responsibilities: Implementations are only required to check these restrictions to the extent that references to a <variable> during the evaluation of the <init> expressions (using one particular evaluation order and order of evaluating the <init> expressions) must be detected. If an implementation detects a violation of the restriction, it must raise an exception with condition type &assertion. Implementations are not required to detect that the continuation of each <init> is invoked more than once. However, if the implementation detects this, it must raise an exception with condition type &assertion.
A sample definition of letrec in terms of simpler forms is in appendix B.
Syntax: <Bindings> must have the form
((<variable1> <init1>) ...),where each <init> is an expression, and <body> is as described in section 9.4. It is a syntax violation for a <variable> to appear more than once in the list of variables being bound.
Semantics: The <variable>s are bound to fresh locations, each <variable> is assigned in left-to-right order to the result of evaluating the corresponding <init>, the <body> is evaluated in the resulting environment, and the values of the last expression in <body> are returned. Despite the left-to-right evaluation and assignment order, each binding of a <variable> has the entire letrec* expression as its region, making it possible to define mutually recursive procedures.
(letrec* ((p
One restriction on letrec* is very important: it must be possible to evaluate each <init> without assigning or referring to the value of the corresponding <variable> or the <variable> of any of the bindings that follow it in <bindings>. The restriction is necessary because Scheme passes arguments by value rather than by name. Another restriction is that the continuation of each <init> should not be invoked more than once.
Implementation responsibilities: Implementations are only required to check these restrictions to the extent that references to a <variable> during the evaluation of the <init> expressions (using one particular evaluation order) must be detected. If an implementation detects a violation of the restriction, it must raise an exception with condition type &assertion. Implementations are not required to detect that the continuation of each <init> is invoked more than once. However, if the implementation detects this, it must raise an exception with condition type &assertion.
The letrec* keyword could be defined approximately in terms of let and set! using syntax-rules (see section 9.20) as follows:
(define-syntax letrec*
The syntax <undefined> represents an expression that returns something that, when stored in a location, causes an exception with condition type &assertion to be raised if an attempt to read from or write to the location occurs before the assignments generated by the letrec* transformation take place. (No such expression is defined in Scheme.)
Syntax: <Mv-bindings> must have the form
((<formals1> <init1>) ...),where each <init> is an expression, and <body> is as described in section 9.4. It is a syntax violation for a variable to appear more than once in the list of variables that appear as part of the formals.
Semantics: The <init>s are evaluated in the current environment (in some unspecified order), and the variables occurring in the <formals> are bound to fresh locations containing the values returned by the <init>s, where the <formals> are matched to the return values in the same way that the <formals> in a lambda expression are matched to the actual arguments in a procedure call. Then, the <body> is evaluated in the extended environment, and the values of the last expression of <body> are returned. Each binding of a variable has <body> as its region.If the <formals> do not match, an exception with condition type &assertion is raised.
(let-values (((a b) (values 1 2))
A sample definition of let-values in terms of simpler forms is in appendix B.
Syntax: <Mv-bindings> must have the form
((<formals1> <init1>) ...),where each <init> is an expression, and <body> is as described in section 9.4.
The let*-values form is similar to let-values, but the <init>s are evaluated and bindings created sequentially from left to right, with the regionof the bindings of each <formals> including the bindings to its right as well as <body>. Thus the second <init> is evaluated in an environment in which the bindings of the first <formals> is visible and initialized, and so on.
(let ((a ’a) (b ’b) (x ’x) (y ’y))
Note: While all of the variables bound by a let-values expression must be distinct, the variables bound by different <formals> of a let*-values expression need not be distinct.
The following macro defines let*-values in terms of let and let-values:
(define-syntax let*-values
The <begin> keyword has two different roles, depending on its context:
It may appear as a form in a <body> (see section 9.4), <library body> (see section 6.1), or <top-level body> (see chapter 7), or directly nested in a begin form that appears in a body. In this case, the begin form must have the shape specified in the first header line. This use of begin acts as a splicing form—the forms inside the <body> are spliced into the surrounding body, as if the begin wrapper were not actually present.
A begin form in a <body> or <library body> must be non-empty if it appears after the first <expression> within the body.
It may appear as an ordinary expression and must have the shape specified in the second header line. In this case, the <expression>s are evaluated sequentially from left to right, and the values of the last <expression> are returned. This expression type is used to sequence side effects such as assignments or input and output.
(define x 0)
The following macro, which uses syntax-rules (see section 9.20), defines begin in terms of lambda. Note that it covers only the expression case of begin.
(define-syntax beginThe following alternative expansion for begin does not make use of the ability to write more than one expression in the body of a lambda expression. It, too, covers only the expression case of begin.
(define-syntax begin
A predicate is a procedure that always returns a boolean value (#t or #f). An equivalence predicate is the computational analogue of a mathematical equivalence relation (it is symmetric, reflexive, and transitive). Of the equivalence predicates described in this section, eq? is the finest or most discriminating, and equal? is the coarsest. The eqv? predicate is slightly less discriminating than eq?.
The eqv? procedure defines a useful equivalence relation on objects. Briefly, it returns #t if obj1 and obj2 should normally be regarded as the same object and #f otherwise. This relation is left slightly open to interpretation, but the following partial specification of eqv? holds for all implementations of Scheme.
The eqv? procedure returns #t if one of the following holds:
Obj1 and obj2 are both booleans and are the same according to the boolean=? procedure (section 9.9).
Obj1 and obj2 are both symbols and are the same according to the symbol=? procedure (section 9.11).
Obj1 and obj2 are both exactnumber objects and are numerically equal (see =, section 9.8).
Obj1 and obj2 are both inexactnumber objects, are numerically equal (see =, section 9.8, and yield the same results (in the sense of eqv?) when passed as arguments to any other procedure that can be defined as a finite composition of Scheme’s standard arithmetic procedures.
Obj1 and obj2 are both characters and are the same character according to the char=? procedure (section 9.12).
Both obj1 and obj2 are the empty list.
Obj1 and obj2 are objects such as pairs, vectors, bytevectors (library chapter on “Bytevectors”), strings, hashtables, records (library chapter on “Records”), ports (library section on “Port I/O”), or hashtables (library chapter on “Hash tables”) that denote the same locations in the store (section 4.8).
Obj1 and obj2 are record-type descriptors that are specified to be eqv? in library section on “Procedural layer”.
Moreover, if (eqv? obj1 obj2) returns #t, then obj1 and obj2 behave the same when passed as arguments to any procedure that can be written as a finite composition of Scheme’s standard procedures.
The eqv? procedure returns #f if one of the following holds:
Obj1 and obj2 are of different types (section 9.2).
Obj1 and obj2 are booleans for which the boolean=? procedure returns #f.
Obj1 and obj2 are symbols for which the symbol=? procedure returns #f.
One of obj1 and obj2 is an exact number object but the other is an inexact number object.
Obj1 and obj2 are rational number objects for which the = procedure returns #f.
Obj1 and obj2 yield different results (in the sense of eqv?) when passed as arguments to any other procedure that can be defined as a finite composition of Scheme’s standard arithmetic procedures.
Obj1 and obj2 are characters for which the char=? procedure returns #f.
One of obj1 and obj2 is the empty list, but the other is not.
Obj1 and obj2 are objects such as pairs, vectors, bytevectors (library chapter on “Bytevectors”), strings, records (library chapter on “Records”), ports (library section on “Port I/O”), or hashtables (library chapter on “Hashtables”) that denote distinct locations.
Obj1 and obj2 are pairs, vectors, strings, or records, or hashtables, where the applying the same accessor (i.e. car, cdr, vector-ref, string-ref, or record accessors) to both yields results for which eqv? returns #f.
Obj1 and obj2 are procedures that would behave differently (return different values or have different side effects) for some arguments.
Note: The eqv? procedure returning #t when obj1 and obj2 are number objects does not imply that = would also return #t when called with obj1 and obj2 as arguments.
(eqv? ’a ’a) ⇒ #t
The following examples illustrate cases in which the above rules do not fully specify the behavior of eqv?. All that can be said about such cases is that the value returned by eqv? must be a boolean.
(eqv? "" "") ⇒ unspecified
The next set of examples shows the use of eqv? with procedures that have local state. Calls to gen-counter must return a distinct procedure every time, since each procedure has its own internal counter. Calls to gen-loser return procedures that behave pairwise equivalent when called. However, eqv? is not required to detect this equivalence.
(define gen-counter
Since the effect of trying to modify constant objects (those returned by literal expressions) is unspecified, implementations are permitted, though not required, to share structure between constants where appropriate. Furthermore, a constant may be copied at any time by the implementation so as to exist simultaneously in different sets of locations, as noted in section 4.8. Thus the value of eqv? on constants is sometimes implementation-dependent.
(eqv? ’(a) ’(a)) ⇒ unspecified
Note: Library section on “Procedural layer” elaborates on the semantics of eqv? on record objects.
The eq? predicate is similar to eqv? except that in some cases it is capable of discerning distinctions finer than those detectable by eqv?.
The eq? and eqv? predicates are guaranteed to have the same behavior on symbols, booleans, the empty list, pairs, procedures, non-empty strings, bytevectors, and vectors, and records. The behavior of eq? on number objects and characters is implementation-dependent, but it always returns either #t or #f, and returns #t only when eqv? would also return #t. The eq? predicate may also behave differently from eqv? on empty vectors, empty bytevectors, and empty strings.
(eq? ’a ’a) ⇒ #t
The equal? predicate returns #t if and only if the (possibly infinite) unfoldings of its arguments into regular trees are equal as ordered trees.
The equal? predicate treats pairs and vectors as nodes with outgoing edges, uses string=? to compare strings, uses bytevector=? to compare bytevectors (see library chapter on “Bytevectors”), and uses eqv? to compare other nodes.
(equal? ’a ’a) ⇒ #t
Note: The equal? procedure must always terminate, even if its arguments contain cycles.
Returns #t if obj is a procedure, otherwise returns #f.
(procedure? car) ⇒ #t
The procedures described here implement arithmetic that is generic over the numerical tower described in chapter 2. The generic procedures described in this section accept both exact and inexact number objects as arguments, performing coercions and selecting the appropriate operations as determined by the numeric subtypes of their arguments.
Library chapter on “Arithmetic” describes libraries that define other numerical procedures.
The procedures listed below must return the correct exact result provided all their arguments are exact:
+ - *
The procedures listed below must return the correct exact result provided all their arguments are exact, and no divisors are zero:
/
The general rule is that the generic operations return the correct exact result when all of their arguments are exact and the result is mathematically well-defined, but return an inexact result when any argument is inexact. Exceptions to this rule include sqrt, exp, log, sin, cos, tan, asin, acos, atan, expt, make-polar, magnitude, and angle, which are allowed (but not required) to return inexact results even when given exact arguments, as indicated in the specification of these procedures.
One general exception to the rule above is that an implementation may return an exact result despite inexact arguments if that exact result would be the correct result for all possible substitutions of exact arguments for the inexact ones. An example is (* 1.0 0) which may return either 0 (exact) or 0.0 (inexact).
The specification of the numerical operations is written as though infinities and NaNs are representable, and specifies many operations with respect to these number objects in ways that are consistent with the IEEE 754 standard for binary floating point arithmetic. An implementation of Scheme is not required to represent infinities and NaNs; however, an implementation must raise a continuable exception with condition type &no-infinities or &no-nans (respectively; see library section on “Flonums”) whenever it is unable to represent an infinity or NaN as required by the specification. In this case, the continuation of the exception handler is the continuation that otherwise would have received the infinity or NaN value. This requirement also applies to conversions between number objects and external representations, including the reading of program source code.
Some operations are the semantic basis for several arithmetic procedures. The behavior of these operations is described in this section for later reference.
Scheme’s operations for performing integer division rely on mathematical operations div, mod, div0, and mod0, that are defined as follows:
div, mod, div0, and mod0 each accept two real numbers x1 and x2 as operands, where x2 must be nonzero.
div returns an integer, and mod returns a real. Their results are specified by
x1 div x2 | = | nd |
x1 mod x2 | = | xm |
* where
Examples:
123 div 10 | = | 12 |
123 mod 10 | = | 3 |
123 div - 10 | = | - 12 |
123 mod - 10 | = | 3 |
- 123 div 10 | = | - 13 |
- 123 mod 10 | = | 7 |
- 123 div - 10 | = | 13 |
- 123 mod - 10 | = | 7 |
* div0 and mod0 are like div and mod, except the result of mod0 lies within a half-open interval centered on zero. The results are specified by
x1 div0 x2 | = | nd |
x1 mod0 x2 | = | xm |
* where:
Examples:
123 div0 10 | = | 12 |
123 mod0 10 | = | 3 |
123 div0 - 10 | = | - 12 |
123 mod0 - 10 | = | 3 |
- 123 div0 10 | = | - 12 |
- 123 mod0 10 | = | - 3 |
- 123 div0 - 10 | = | 12 |
- 123 mod0 - 10 | = | - 3 |
*
In general, the transcendental functions log, sin-1 (arcsine), cos-1 (arccosine), and tan-1 are multiply defined. The value of log z is defined to be the one whose imaginary part lies in the range from - (inclusive if - 0.0 is distinguished, exclusive otherwise) to (inclusive). log 0 is undefined.
The value of log z for non-real z is defined in terms of log on real numbers as
where angle z is the angle of z = a · eib specified as:
angle z = b + 2 n |
with - ≤ angle z≤ and angle z = b + 2 n for some integer n.
With the one-argument version of log defined this way, the values of the two-argument-version of log, sin-1 z, cos-1 z, tan-1 z, and the two-argument version of tan-1 are according to the following formulæ:
log z b | = | (log z/log b) |
sin-1 z | = | - i log (i z + (1 - z2)1/2) |
cos-1 z | = | / 2 - sin-1 z |
tan-1 z | = | (log (1 + i z) - log (1 - i z)) / (2 i) |
tan-1 x y | = | angle(x + yi) |
*
The range of tan-1 x y is as in the following table. The asterisk (*) indicates that the entry applies to implementations that distinguish minus zero.
|
These numerical type predicates can be applied to any kind of argument. They return #t if the object is a number object of the named type, and #f otherwise. In general, if a type predicate is true of a number object then all higher type predicates are also true of that number object. Consequently, if a type predicate is false of a number object, then all lower type predicates are also false of that number object.
If z is a complex number object, then (real? z) is true if and only if (zero? (imag-part z)) and (exact? (imag-part z)) are both true.
If x is a real number object, then (rational? x) is true if and only if there exist exact integer objects k1 and k2 such that (= x (/ k1 k2)) and (= (numerator x) k1) and (= (denominator x) k2) are all true. Thus infinities and NaNs are not rational number objects.
If q is a rational number objects, then (integer? q) is true if and only if (= (denominator q) 1) is true. If q is not a rational number object, then (integer? q) is #f.
(complex? 3+4i) ⇒ #t
Note: Except for number?, the behavior of these type predicates on inexact number objects is unreliable, because any inaccuracy may affect the result.
These numerical type predicates can be applied to any kind of argument. The real-valued? procedure returns #t if the object is a number object and is equal in the sense of = to some real number object, or if the object is a NaN, or a complex number object whose real part is a NaN and whose imaginary part zero in the sense of zero?. The rational-valued? and integer-valued? procedures return #t if the object is a number object and is equal in the sense of = to some object of the named type, and otherwise they return #f.
(real-valued? +nan.0) ⇒ #t
Note: The behavior of these type predicates on inexact number objects is unreliable, because any inaccuracy may affect the result.
These numerical predicates provide tests for the exactness of a quantity. For any number object, precisely one of these predicates is true.
(exact? 5) ⇒ #t
The inexact procedure returns an inexact representation of z. If inexact number objects of the appropriate type have bounded precision, then the value returned is an inexact number object that is nearest to the argument. If an exact argument has no reasonably close inexact equivalent, an exception with condition type &implementation-violation may be raised.
Note: For a real number object whose magnitude is finite but so large that it has no reasonable finite approximation as an inexact number, a reasonably close inexact equivalent may be +inf.0 or -inf.0. Similarly, the inexact representation of a complex number object whose components are finite may have infinite components.
The exact procedure returns an exact representation of z. The value returned is the exact number object that is numerically closest to the argument; in most cases, the result of this procedure should be numerically equal to its argument. If an inexact argument has no reasonably close exact equivalent, an exception with condition type &implementation-violation may be raised.
These procedures implement the natural one-to-one correspondence between exact and inexact integer objects throughout an implementation-dependent range.
The inexact and exact procedures are idempotent.
These procedures return #t if their arguments are (respectively): equal, monotonically increasing, monotonically decreasing, monotonically nondecreasing, or monotonically nonincreasing, and #f otherwise.
(= +inf.0 +inf.0) ⇒ #t
For any real number object x that is neither infinite nor NaN:
(< -inf.0 x +inf.0)) ⇒ #t
For any number object z:
(= +nan.0 z) ⇒ #fFor any real number object x:
(< +nan.0 x) ⇒ #fThese predicates are required to be transitive.
Note: The traditional implementations of these predicates in Lisp-like languages are not transitive.
Note: While it is possible to compare inexact number objects using these predicates, the results may be unreliable because a small inaccuracy may affect the result; this is especially true of = and zero? (below).When in doubt, consult a numerical analyst.
These numerical predicates test a number object for a particular property, returning #t or #f. See note above. The zero? procedure tests if the number object is = to zero, positive? tests whether it is greater than zero, negative? tests whether it is less than zero, odd? tests whether it is odd, even? tests whether it is even, finite? tests whether it is not an infinity and not a NaN, infinite? tests whether it is an infinity, nan? tests whether it is a NaN.
(zero? +0.0) ⇒ #t
These procedures return the maximum or minimum of their arguments.
(max 3 4) ⇒ 4 ; exact
For any real number object x:
(max +inf.0 x) ⇒ +inf.0
Note: If any argument is inexact, then the result is also inexact (unless the procedure can prove that the inaccuracy is not large enough to affect the result, which is possible only in unusual implementations). If min or max is used to compare number objects of mixed exactness, and the numerical value of the result cannot be represented as an inexact number object without loss of accuracy, then the procedure may raise an exception with condition type &implementation-restriction.
These procedures return the sum or product of their arguments.
(+ 3 4) ⇒ 7
For any real number object x that is neither infinite nor NaN:
(+ +inf.0 x) ⇒ +inf.0
For any real number object x:
(+ +nan.0 x) ⇒ +nan.0
For any real number object x that is not an exact 0:
(* +nan.0 x) ⇒ +nan.0
If any of these procedures are applied to mixed non-rational real and non-real complex arguments, they either raise an exception with condition type &implementation-restriction or return an unspecified number object.
Implementations that distinguish - 0.0 should adopt behavior consistent with the following examples:
(+ 0.0 -0.0) ⇒ 0.0
With two or more arguments, this procedures returns the difference of its arguments, associating to the left. With one argument, however, it returns the additive inverse of its argument.
(- 3 4) ⇒ -1
If this procedure is applied to mixed non-rational real and non-real complex arguments, it either raises an exception with condition type &implementation-restriction or returns an unspecified number object.
Implementations that distinguish - 0.0 should adopt behavior consistent with the following examples:
(- 0.0) ⇒ -0.0
If all of the arguments are exact, then the divisors must all be nonzero. With two or more arguments, this procedure returns the quotient of its arguments, associating to the left. With one argument, however, it returns the multiplicative inverse of its argument.
(/ 3 4 5) ⇒ 3/20
If this procedure is applied to mixed non-rational real and non-real complex arguments, it either raises an exception with condition type &implementation-restriction or returns an unspecified number object.
Returns the absolute value of its argument.
(abs -7) ⇒ 7
These procedures implement number-theoretic integer division and return the results of the corresponding mathematical operations specified in section 9.8.3.1. In each case, x1 must be neither infinite nor a NaN, and x2 must be nonzero; otherwise, an exception with condition type &assertion is raised.
(div x1 x2) ⇒ x1 div x2
These procedures return the greatest common divisor or least common multiple of their arguments. The result is always non-negative.
(gcd 32 -36) ⇒ 4
These procedures return the numerator or denominator of their argument; the result is computed as if the argument was represented as a fraction in lowest terms. The denominator is always positive. The denominator of 0 is defined to be 1.
(numerator (/ 6 4)) ⇒ 3
These procedures return inexact integer objects for inexact arguments that are not infinities or NaNs, and exact integer objects for exact rational arguments. For such arguments, floor returns the largest integer object not larger than x. The ceiling procedure returns the smallest integer object not smaller than x. The truncate procedure returns the integer object closest to x whose absolute value is not larger than the absolute value of x. The round procedure returns the closest integer object to x, rounding to even when x represents a number halfway between two integers.
Note: If the argument to one of these procedures is inexact, then the result is also inexact. If an exact value is needed, the result should be passed to the exact procedure.
Although infinities and NaNs are not integer objects, these procedures return an infinity when given an infinity as an argument, and a NaN when given a NaN.
(floor -4.3) ⇒ -5.0
The rationalize procedure returns the a number object representing the simplest rational number differing from x1 by no more than x2. A rational number r1 is simpler than another rational number r2 if r1 = p1/q1 and r2 = p2/q2 (in lowest terms) and |p1| ≤ |p2| and |q1| ≤ |q2|. Thus 3/5 is simpler than 4/7. Although not all rationals are comparable in this ordering (consider 2/7 and 3/5) any interval contains a rational number that is simpler than every other rational number in that interval (the simpler 2/5 lies between 2/7 and 3/5). Note that 0 = 0/1 is the simplest rational of all.
(rationalize
These procedures compute the usual transcendental functions. The exp procedure computes the base-e exponential of z. The log procedure with a single argument computes the natural logarithm of z (not the base ten logarithm); (log z1 z2) computes the base-z2 logarithm of z1. The asin, acos, and atan procedures compute arcsine, arccosine, and arctangent, respectively. The two-argument variant of atan computes (angle (make-rectangular x2 x1)).
See section 9.8.3.2 for the underlying mathematical operations. These procedures may return inexact results even when given exact arguments.
(exp +inf.0) ⇒ +inf.0
Returns the principal square root of z. For rational z, the result has either positive real part, or zero real part and non-negative imaginary part. With log defined as in section 9.8.3.2, the value of (sqrt z) could be expressed as
The sqrt procedure may return an inexact result even when given an exact argument.
(sqrt -5)
The exact-integer-sqrt procedure returns two non-negative exact integer objects s and r where k = s2 + r and k < (s + 1)2.
(exact-integer-sqrt 4) ⇒ 2, 0
Returns z1 raised to the power z2. For nonzero z1,
0.0z is 1.0 if z = 0.0, and 0.0 if (real-part z) is positive. For other cases in which the first argument is zero, either an exception is raised with condition type &implementation-restriction, or an unspecified number object is returned.
For an exact real number object z1 and an exact integer object z2, (expt z1 z2) must return an exact result. For all other values of z1 and z2, (expt z1 z2) may return an inexact result, even when both z1 and z2 are exact.
(expt 5 3) ⇒ 125
Suppose x1, x2, x3, and x4 are real numbers and z is a complex number such that
Then:
(make-rectangular x1 x2) ⇒ zwhere - ≤ xangle ≤ with xangle = x4 + 2 n for some integer n.
(angle -1.0) ⇒
Moreover, suppose x1, x2 are such that either x1 or x2 is an infinity, then
(make-rectangular x1 x2) ⇒ z
The make-polar, magnitude, and angle procedures may return inexact results even when given exact arguments.
(angle -1) ⇒
Radix must be an exact integer object, either 2, 8, 10, or 16. If omitted, radix defaults to 10. If a precision is specified, then z must be an inexact complex number object, precision must be an exact positive integer object, and radix must be 10. The number->string procedure takes a number object and a radix and returns as a string an external representation of the given number object in the given radix such that
(let ((number z) (radix radix))is true. If no possible result makes this expression true, an exception with condition type &implementation-restriction is raised.
Note: The error case can occur only when z is not a complex number object or is a complex number object with a non-rational real or imaginary part.
If a precision is specified, then the representations of the inexact real components of the result, unless they are infinite or NaN, specify an explicit <mantissa width> p, and p is the least p ≥ precision for which the above expression is true.
If z is inexact, the radix is 10, and the above expression and condition can be satisfied by a result that contains a decimal point, then the result contains a decimal point and is expressed using the minimum number of digits (exclusive of exponent, trailing zeroes, and mantissa width) needed to make the above expression and condition true [4, 7]; otherwise the format of the result is unspecified.
The result returned by number->string never contains an explicit radix prefix.
Returns a number object with maximally precise representation expressed by the given string. Radix must be an exact integer object, either 2, 8, 10, or 16. If supplied, radix is a default radix that may be overridden by an explicit radix prefix in string (e.g., "#o177"). If radix is not supplied, then the default radix is 10. If string is not a syntactically valid notation for a number object or a notation for a rational number object with a zero denominator, then string->number returns #f.
(string->number "100") ⇒ 100
Note: The string->number procedure always returns a number or #f; it never raises an exception.
The standard boolean objects for true and false are written as #t and #f.However, of all the standard Scheme values, only #f counts as false in conditional expressions. See section 4.6.
Note: Programmers accustomed to other dialects of Lisp should be aware that Scheme distinguishes both #f and the empty list from each other and from the symbol nil.
Returns #t if obj is #f, and returns #f otherwise.
(not #t) ⇒ #f
Returns #t if obj is either #t or #f and returns #f otherwise.
(boolean? #f) ⇒ #t
Returns #t if the booleans are the same.
A pair (sometimes called a dotted pair) is a record structure with two fields called the car and cdr fields (for historical reasons). Pairs are created by the procedure cons. The car and cdr fields are accessed by the procedures car and cdr.
Pairs are used primarily to represent lists. A list can be defined recursively as either the empty listor a pair whose cdr is a list. More precisely, the set of lists is defined as the smallest set X such that
The empty list is in X.
If list is in X, then any pair whose cdr field contains list is also in X.
The objects in the car fields of successive pairs of a list are the elements of the list. For example, a two-element list is a pair whose car is the first element and whose cdr is a pair whose car is the second element and whose cdr is the empty list. The length of a list is the number of elements, which is the same as the number of pairs.
The empty listis a special object of its own type. It is not a pair. It has no elements and its length is zero.
Note: The above definitions imply that all lists have finite length and are terminated by the empty list.
A chain of pairs not ending in the empty list is called an improper list. Note that an improper list is not a list. The list and dotted notations can be combined to represent improper lists:
(a b c . d)
is equivalent to
(a . (b . (c . d)))
Whether a given pair is a list depends upon what is stored in the cdr field.
Returns #t if obj is a pair, and otherwise returns #f.
(pair? ’(a . b)) ⇒ #t
Returns a newly allocated pair whose car is obj1 and whose cdr is obj2. The pair is guaranteed to be different (in the sense of eqv?) from every existing object.
(cons ’a ’()) ⇒ (a)
Returns the contents of the car field of pair.
(car ’(a b c)) ⇒ a
Returns the contents of the cdr field of pair.
(cdr ’((a) b c d)) ⇒ (b c d)
These procedures are compositions of car and cdr, where for example caddr could be defined by
(define caddr (lambda (x) (car (cdr (cdr x))))).
Arbitrary compositions, up to four deep, are provided. There are twenty-eight of these procedures in all.
Returns #t if obj is the empty list. Otherwise, returns #f.
Returns #t if obj is a list. Otherwise, returns #f. By definition, all lists are chains of pairs that have finite length and are terminated by the empty list.
(list? ’(a b c)) ⇒ #t
Returns a newly allocated list of its arguments.
(list ’a (+ 3 4) ’c) ⇒ (a 7 c)
Returns the length of list.
(length ’(a b c)) ⇒ 3
Returns a possibly improper list consisting of the elements of the first list followed by the elements of the other lists, with obj as the cdr of the final pair. An improper list results if obj is not a list.
(append ’(x) ’(y)) ⇒ (x y)
The resulting chain of pairs is always newly allocated, except that it shares structure with the obj argument.
Returns a newly allocated list consisting of the elements of list in reverse order.
(reverse ’(a b c)) ⇒ (c b a)
List should be a list of size at least k.
The list-tail procedure returns the subchain of pairs of list obtained by omitting the first k elements.
(list-tail ’(a b c d) 2) ⇒ (c d)
Implementation responsibilities: The implementation must check that list is a chain of pairs whose length is at least k. It should not check that it is a chain of pairs beyond this length.
List must be a list whose length is at least k + 1.
Returns the kth element of list.
(list-ref ’(a b c d) 2) ⇒ c
Implementation responsibilities: The implementation must check that list is a chain of pairs whose length is at least k + 1. It should not check that it is a list of pairs beyond this length.
The lists should all have the same length. Proc should accept as many arguments as there are lists and return a single value. Proc should not mutate any of the lists.
The map procedure applies proc element-wise to the elements of the lists and returns a list of the results, in order. Proc is always called in the same dynamic environment as map itself. The dynamic order in which proc is applied to the elements of the lists is unspecified. If multiple returns occur from map, the values returned by earlier returns are not mutated.
(map cadr ’((a b) (d e) (g h)))
Implementation responsibilities: The implementation should check that the lists all have the same length. The implementation must check the restrictions on proc to the extent performed by applying it as described.
The lists should all have the same length. Proc should accept as many arguments as there are lists. Proc should not mutate any of the lists.
The for-each procedure applies proc element-wise to the elements of the lists for its side effects, in order from the first elements to the last. Proc is always called in the same dynamic environment as for-each itself. The return values of for-each are unspecified.
(let ((v (make-vector 5)))
Implementation responsibilities: The implementation should check that the lists all have the same length. The implementation must check the restrictions on proc to the extent performed by applying it as described.
Note: Implementations of for-each may or may not tail-call proc on the last elements.
Symbols are objects whose usefulness rests on the fact that two symbols are identical (in the sense of eq?, eqv? and equal?) if and only if their names are spelled the same way. This is exactly the property needed to represent identifiersin programs, and so most implementations of Scheme use them internally for that purpose. Symbols are useful for many other applications; for instance, they may be used the way enumerated values are used in C and Pascal.
A symbol literal is formed using quote.
Hello ⇒ Hello
Returns #t if obj is a symbol, otherwise returns #f.
(symbol? ’foo) ⇒ #t
Returns the name of symbol as an immutable string.
(symbol->string ’flying-fish)
Returns #t if the symbols are the same, i.e., if their names are spelled the same.
Returns the symbol whose name is string.
(eq? ’mISSISSIppi ’mississippi)
Characters are objects that represent Unicode scalar values [27].
Note: Unicode defines a standard mapping between sequences of code points(integers in the range 0 to #x10FFFF in the latest version of the standard) and human-readable “characters”. More precisely, Unicode distinguishes between glyphs, which are printed for humans to read, and characters, which are abstract entities that map to glyphs (sometimes in a way that’s sensitive to surrounding characters). Furthermore, different sequences of code points sometimes correspond to the same character. The relationships among code points, characters, and glyphs are subtle and complex.Despite this complexity, most things that a literate human would call a “character” can be represented by a single code point in Unicode (though several code-point sequences may represent that same character). For example, Roman letters, Cyrillic letters, Hebrew consonants, and most Chinese characters fall into this category. Thus, the “code point” approximation of “character” works well for many purposes. More specifically, Scheme characters correspond to Unicode scalar values, which includes all code points except those designated as surrogates. A surrogate is a code point in the range #xD800 to #xDFFF that is used in pairs in the UTF-16 encoding to encode a supplementary character (whose code is in the range #x10000 to #x10FFFF).
Returns #t if obj is a character, otherwise returns #f.
Sv must be a Unicode scalar value, i.e., a non-negative exact integer object in [0, #xD7FF] ∪ [#xE000, #x10FFFF].
Given a character, char->integer returns its Unicode scalar value as an exact integer object. For a Unicode scalar value sv, integer->char returns its associated character.
(integer->char 32) ⇒ #\space
These procedures impose a total ordering on the set of characters according to their Unicode scalar values.
(char<? #\z #\ß) ⇒ #t
Strings are sequences of characters.
The length of a string is the number of characters that it contains. This number is fixed when the string is created, and represented by an exact, non-negative integer object. The valid indices of a string are the exact non-negative integer objects less than the length of the string. The first character of a string has index 0, the second has index 1, and so on.
In phrases such as “the characters of string beginning with index start and ending with index end”, it is understood that the index start is inclusive and the index end is exclusive. Thus if start and end are the same index, a null substring is referred to, and if start is zero and end is the length of string, then the entire string is referred to.
Returns #t if obj is a string, otherwise returns #f.
Returns a newly allocated string of length k. If char is given, then all elements of the string are initialized to char, otherwise the contents of the string are unspecified.
Returns a newly allocated string composed of the arguments.
Returns the number of characters in the given string as an exact integer object.
K must be a valid index of string. The string-ref procedure returns character
k of string using zero-origin indexing.
Note: Implementors are encouraged to make string-ref run in constant time.
Returns #t if the strings are the same length and contain the same characters in the same positions. Otherwise, returns #f.
(string=? "Straße" "Strasse") ⇒ #f
These procedures are the lexicographic extensions to strings of the corresponding orderings on characters. For example, string<? is the lexicographic ordering on strings induced by the ordering char<? on characters. If two strings differ in length but are the same up to the length of the shorter string, the shorter string is considered to be lexicographically less than the longer string.
(string<? "z" "ß") ⇒ #t
String must be a string, and start and end must be exact integer objects satisfying
0 ≤ start ≤ end ≤ (string-length string). |
The substring procedure returns a newly allocated string formed from the characters of string beginning with index start (inclusive) and ending with index end (exclusive).
Returns a newly allocated string whose characters form the concatenation of the given strings.
List must be a list of characters. The string->list procedure returns a newly allocated list of the characters that make up the given string. The list->string procedure returns a newly allocated string formed from the characters in list. The string->list and list->string procedures are inverses so far as equal? is concerned.
The strings must all have the same length. Proc should accept as many arguments as there are strings. The string-for-each procedure applies proc element-wise to the characters of the strings for its side effects, in order from the first characters to the last. Proc is always called in the same dynamic environment as string-for-each itself. The return values of string-for-each are unspecified.
Analogous to for-each.
Implementation responsibilities: The implementation must check the restrictions on proc to the extent performed by applying it as described.
Returns a newly allocated copy of the given string.
Vectors are heterogeneous structures whose elements are indexed by integers. A vector typically occupies less space than a list of the same length, and the average time required to access a randomly chosen element is typically less for the vector than for the list.
The length of a vector is the number of elements that it contains. This number is a non-negative integer that is fixed when the vector is created, and represented by an exact integer object. The valid indicesof a vector are the exact non-negative integer objects less than the length of the vector. The first element in a vector is indexed by zero, and the last element is indexed by one less than the length of the vector.
Like list constants, vector constants must be quoted:
’#(0 (2 2 2 2) "Anna")
Returns #t if obj is a vector. Otherwise the procedure returns #f.
Returns a newly allocated vector of k elements. If a second argument is given, then each element is initialized to fill. Otherwise the initial contents of each element is unspecified.
Returns a newly allocated vector whose elements contain the given arguments. Analogous to list.
(vector ’a ’b ’c) ⇒ #(a b c)
Returns the number of elements in vector as an exact integer object.
K must be a valid index of vector. The vector-ref procedure returns the contents of element
k of vector.
(vector-ref ’#(1 1 2 3 5 8 13 21)
K must be a valid index of vector. The vector-set! procedure stores obj in element
k of vector. The value returned by vector-set! is unspecified.
Passing an immutable vector to vector-set! should cause an exception with condition type &assertion to be raised.
(let ((vec (vector 0 ’(2 2 2 2) "Anna")))
The vector->list procedure returns a newly allocated list of the objects contained in the elements of vector. The list->vector procedure returns a newly created vector initialized to the elements of the list list.
(vector->list ’#(dah dah didah))
Stores fill in every element of vector and returns the unspecified value.
The vectors must all have the same length. Proc should accept as many arguments as there are vectors and return a single value.
The vector-map procedure applies proc element-wise to the elements of the vectors and returns a vector of the results, in order. Proc is always called in the same dynamic environment as vector-map itself. The dynamic order in which proc is applied to the elements of the vectors is unspecified.
Analogous to map.
Implementation responsibilities: The implementation must check the restrictions on proc to the extent performed by applying it as described.
The vectors must all have the same length. Proc should accept as many arguments as there are vectors. The vector-for-each procedure applies proc element-wise to the elements of the vectors for its side effects, in order from the first elements to the last. Proc is always called in the same dynamic environment as vector-for-each itself. The return values of vector-for-each are unspecified.
Analogous to for-each.
Implementation responsibilities: The implementation must check the restrictions on proc to the extent performed by applying it as described.
Who must be a string or a symbol or #f. Message must be a string. The irritants are arbitrary objects.
These procedures raise an exception. Calling the error procedure means that an error has occurred, typically caused by something that has gone wrong in the interaction of the program with the external world or the user. Calling the assertion-violation procedure means that an invalid call to a procedure was made, either passing an invalid number of arguments, or passing an argument that it is not specified to handle.
The who argument should describe the procedure or operation that detected the exception. The message argument should describe the exceptional situation. The irritants should be the arguments to the operation that detected the operation.
The condition object provided with the exception (see library chapter on “Exceptions and conditions”) has the following condition types:
If who is not #f, the condition has condition type &who, with who as the value of the who field. In that case, who should identify the procedure or entity that detected the exception. If it is #f, the condition does not have condition type &who.
The condition has condition type &message, with message as the value of the message field.
The condition has condition type &irritants, and the irritants field has as its value a list of the irritants.
Moreover, the condition created by error has condition type &error, and the condition created by assertion-violation has condition type &assertion.
(define (fac n)
An assert form is evaluated by evaluating <expression>. If <expression> returns a true value, that value is returned from the assert expression. If <expression> returns #f, an exception with condition types &assertion and &message is raised. The message provided in the condition object is implementation-dependent.
Note: Implementations can (and are encouraged to) exploit the fact that assert is syntax to provide as much information as possible about the location of the assertion failure.
This chapter describes various primitive procedures which control the flow of program execution in special ways.
Rest-args must be a list. Proc should accept n arguments, where n is number of args plus the length of rest-args. Calls proc with the elements of the list (append (list arg1 ...) rest-args) as the actual arguments.
(apply + (list 3 4)) ⇒ 7
Proc should accept one argument. The procedure call-with-current-continuation (which is the same as the procedure call/cc) packages the current continuation (see the rationale below) as an “escape procedure”and passes it as an argument to proc. The escape procedure is a Scheme procedure that, if it is later called, will abandon whatever continuation is in effect at that later time and will instead use the continuation that was in effect when the escape procedure was created. Calling the escape procedure may cause the invocation of before and after thunks installed using dynamic-wind.
The escape procedure accepts the same number of arguments as the continuation of the original call to call-with-current-continuation.
The escape procedure that is passed to proc has unlimited extent just like any other procedure in Scheme. It may be stored in variables or data structures and may be called as many times as desired.
The following examples show only the most common ways in which call-with-current-continuation is used. If all real uses were as simple as these examples, there would be no need for a procedure with the power of call-with-current-continuation.
(call-with-current-continuation
Delivers all of its arguments to its continuation. The values procedure might be defined as follows:
(define (values . things)The continuations of all non-final expressions within a sequence of expressions in lambda, begin, let, let*, letrec, letrec*, let-values, let*-values, case, cond, and do forms as well as the continuations of the before and after arguments to dynamic-wind take an arbitrary number of values.
Except for these and the continuations created by call-with-values, let-values, and let*-values, all other continuations take exactly one value. The effect of passing an inappropriate number of values to a continuation not created by call-with-values, let-values, or let*-values is undefined.
Producer must be a procedure and should accept zero arguments. Consumer must be a procedure and should accept as many values as producer returns. Calls producer with no arguments and a continuation that, when passed some values, calls the consumer procedure with those values as arguments. The continuation for the call to consumer is the continuation of the call to call-with-values.
(call-with-values (lambda () (values 4 5))
Implementation responsibilities: After producer returns, the implementation must check that consumer accepts as many values as consumer has returned.
Before, thunk, and after must be procedures, and each should accept zero arguments. These procedures may return any number of values.
In the absence of any calls to escape procedures (see call-with-current-continuation), dynamic-wind behaves as if defined as follows.
(define dynamic-wind
That is, before is called without arguments. If before returns, thunk is called without arguments. If thunk returns, after is called without arguments. Finally, if after returns, the values resulting from the call to thunk are returned.
Implementation responsibilities: The implementation must check the restrictions on thunk and after only if they are actually called.
Invoking an escape procedure to transfer control into or out of the dynamic extent of the call to thunk can cause additional calls to before and after. When an escape procedure created outside the dynamic extent of the call to thunk is invoked from within the dynamic extent, after is called just after control leaves the dynamic extent. Similarly, when an escape procedure created within the dynamic extent of the call to thunk is invoked from outside the dynamic extent, before is called just before control reenters the dynamic extent. In the latter case, if thunk returns, after is called even if thunk has returned previously. While the calls to before and after are not considered to be within the dynamic extent of the call to thunk, calls to the before and after thunks of any other calls to dynamic-wind that occur within the dynamic extent of the call to thunk are considered to be within the dynamic extent of the call to thunk.
More precisely, an escape procedure transfers control out of the dynamic extent of a set of zero or more active dynamic-wind thunk calls x ... and transfer control into the dynamic extent of a set of zero or more active dynamic-wind thunk calls y .... It leaves the dynamic extent of the most recent x and calls without arguments the corresponding after thunk. If the after thunk returns, the escape procedure proceeds to the next most recent x, and so on. Once each x has been handled in this manner, the escape procedure calls without arguments the before thunk corresponding to the least recent y. If the before thunk returns, the escape procedure reenters the dynamic extent of the least recent y and proceeds with the next least recent y, and so on. Once each y has been handled in this manner, control is transferred to the continuation packaged in the escape procedure.
(let ((path ’())
“Named let” is a variant on the syntax of let which provides a general looping construct and may also be used to express recursion. It has the same syntax and semantics as ordinary let except that <variable> is bound within <body> to a procedure whose formal arguments are the bound variables and whose body is <body>. Thus the execution of <body> may be repeated by invoking the procedure named by <variable>.
(let loop ((numbers ’(3 -2 1 6 -5))
“Backquote” or “quasiquote”expressions are useful for constructing a list or vector structure when some but not all of the desired structure is known in advance.
Syntax: <Qq template> should be as specified by the grammar at the end of this entry.
Semantics: If no unquote or unquote-splicing forms appear within the <qq template>, the result of evaluating (quasiquote <qq template>) is equivalent to the result of evaluating (quote <qq template>).
If an (unquote <expression> ...) form appears inside a <qq template>, however, the <expression>s are evaluated (“unquoted”) and their results are inserted into the structure instead of the unquote form.
If an (unquote-splicing <expression> ...) form appears inside a <qq template>, then the <expression>s must evaluate to lists; the opening and closing parentheses of the lists are then “stripped away” and the elements of the lists are inserted in place of the unquote-splicing form.
Any unquote-splicing or multi-operand unquote form must appear only within a list or vector <qq template>.
As noted in section 3.3.5, (quasiquote <qq template>) may be abbreviated ‘<qq template>, (unquote <expression>) may be abbreviated ,<expression>, and (unquote-splicing <expression>) may be abbreviated ,@<expression>.
‘(list ,(+ 1 2) 4) ⇒ (list 3 4)
Quasiquote forms may be nested. Substitutions are made only for unquoted components appearing at the same nesting level as the outermost quasiquote. The nesting level increases by one inside each successive quasiquotation, and decreases by one inside each unquotation.
‘(a ‘(b ,(+ 1 2) ,(foo ,(+ 1 3) d) e) f)
A quasiquote expression may return either fresh, mutable objects or literal structure for any structure that is constructed at run time during the evaluation of the expression. Portions that do not need to be rebuilt are always literal. Thus,
(let ((a 3)) ‘((1 2) ,a ,4 ,’five 6))may be equivalent to either of the following expressions:
’((1 2) 3 4 five 6)However, it is not equivalent to this expression:
(let ((a 3)) (list (list 1 2) a 4 ’five 6))It is a syntax violation if any of the identifiers quasiquote, unquote, or unquote-splicing appear in positions within a <qq template> otherwise than as described above.
The following grammar for quasiquote expressions is not context-free. It is presented as a recipe for generating an infinite number of production rules. Imagine a copy of the following rules for D = 1, 2, 3, .... D keeps track of the nesting depth.
<qq template> → <qq template 1>
In <quasiquotation>s, a <list qq template D> can sometimes be confused with either an <unquotation D> or a <splicing unquotation D>. The interpretation as an <unquotation> or <splicing unquotation D> takes precedence.
The let-syntax and letrec-syntax forms are analogous to let and letrec but bind keywords rather than variables. Like a begin form, a let-syntax or letrec-syntax form may appear in a definition context, in which case it is treated as a definition, and the forms in the body must also be definitions. A let-syntax or letrec-syntax form may also appear in an expression context, in which case the forms within their bodies must be expressions.
Syntax: <Bindings> must have the form
((<keyword> <expression>) ...)Each <keyword> is an identifier, and each <expression> is an expression that evaluates, at macro-expansion time, to a transformer, which is returned by syntax-rules or identifier-syntax expressions (see section 9.20, or by syntax-case expressions (see on “syntax-case”). It is a syntax violation for <keyword> to appear more than once in the list of keywords being bound.
Semantics: The <form>s are expanded in the syntactic environment obtained by extending the syntactic environment of the let-syntax form with macros whose keywords are the <keyword>s, bound to the specified transformers. Each binding of a <keyword> has the <form>s as its region.
The <form>s of a let-syntax form are treated, whether in definition or expression context, as if wrapped in an implicit begin; see section 9.5.7. Thus definitions in the result of expanding the <form>s have the same region as any definition appearing in place of the let-syntax form would have.
Implementation responsibilities: The implementation must check that the value of each <expression> is a transformer when the evaluation produces a value.
(let-syntax ((when (syntax-rules ()
Syntax: Same as for let-syntax.
Semantics: The <form>s are expanded in the syntactic environment obtained by extending the syntactic environment of the letrec-syntax form with macros whose keywords are the <keyword>s, bound to the specified transformers. Each binding of a <keyword> has the <bindings> as well as the <form>s within its region, so the transformers can transcribe forms into uses of the macros introduced by the letrec-syntax form.
The <form>s of a letrec-syntax form are treated, whether in definition or expression context, as if wrapped in an implicit begin; see section 9.5.7. Thus definitions in the result of expanding the <form>s have the same region as any definition appearing in place of the letrec-syntax form would have.
Implementation responsibilities: The implementation must check that the value of each <expression> is a transformer when the <expression> evaluates to a value.
(letrec-syntax
The following example highlights how let-syntax and letrec-syntax differ.
(let ((f (lambda (x) (+ x 1))))
The two expressions are identical except that the let-syntax form in the first expression is a letrec-syntax form in the second. In the first expression, the f occurring in g refers to the let-bound variable f, whereas in the second it refers to the keyword f whose binding is established by the letrec-syntax form.
Syntax: Each <literal> must be an identifier. Each <syntax rule> must have the following form:
(<srpattern> <template>)
An <srpattern> is a restricted form of <pattern>, namely, a nonempty <pattern> in one of four parenthesized forms below whose first subform is an identifier or an underscore _. A <pattern> is an identifier, constant, or one of the following.
(<pattern> ...)
An <ellipsis> is the identifier “...” (three periods).
A <template> is a pattern variable, an identifier that is not a pattern variable, a pattern datum, or one of the following.
(<subtemplate> ...)
A <subtemplate> is a <template> followed by zero or more ellipses.
Semantics: An instance of syntax-rules evaluates, at macro-expansion time, to a new macro transformer by specifying a sequence of hygienic rewrite rules. A use of a macro whose keyword is associated with a transformer specified by syntax-rules is matched against the patterns contained in the <syntax rule>s, beginning with the leftmost <syntax rule>. When a match is found, the macro use is transcribed hygienically according to the template. It is a syntax violation when no match is found.
An identifier appearing within a <pattern> may be an underscore ( _ ), a literal identifier listed in the list of literals (<literal> ...), or an ellipsis ( ... ). All other identifiers appearing within a <pattern> are pattern variables. It is a syntax violation if an ellipsis or underscore appears in (<literal> ...).
While the first subform of <srpattern> may be an identifier, the identifier is not involved in the matching and is not considered a pattern variable or literal identifier.
Pattern variables match arbitrary input subforms and are used to refer to elements of the input. It is a syntax violation if the same pattern variable appears more than once in a <pattern>.
Underscores also match arbitrary input subforms but are not pattern variables and so cannot be used to refer to those elements. Multiple underscores may appear in a <pattern>.
A literal identifier matches an input subform if and only if the input subform is an identifier and either both its occurrence in the input expression and its occurrence in the list of literals have the same lexical binding, or the two identifiers have the same name and both have no lexical binding.
A subpattern followed by an ellipsis can match zero or more elements of the input.
More formally, an input form F matches a pattern P if and only if one of the following holds:
P is an underscore ( _ ).
P is a pattern variable.
P is a literal identifier and F is an identifier such that both P and F would refer to the same binding if both were to appear in the output of the macro outside of any bindings inserted into the output of the macro. (If neither of two like-named identifiers refers to any binding, i.e., both are undefined, they are considered to refer to the same binding.)
P is of the form (P1 ... Pn) and F is a list of n elements that match P1 through Pn.
P is of the form (P1 ... Pn . Px) and F is a list or improper list of n or more elements whose first n elements match P1 through Pn and whose nth cdr matches Px.
P is of the form (P1 ... Pk Pe <ellipsis> Pm+1 ... Pn), where <ellipsis> is the identifier ... and F is a list of n elements whose first k elements match P1 through Pk, whose next m - k elements each match Pe, and whose remaining n - m elements match Pm+1 through Pn.
P is of the form (P1 ... Pk Pe <ellipsis> Pm+1 ... Pn . Px), where <ellipsis> is the identifier ... and F is a list or improper list of n elements whose first k elements match P1 through Pk, whose next m - k elements each match Pe, whose next n - m elements match Pm+1 through Pn, and whose nth and final cdr matches Px.
P is of the form #(P1 ... Pn) and F is a vector of n elements that match P1 through Pn.
P is of the form #(P1 ... Pk Pe <ellipsis> Pm+1 ... Pn), where <ellipsis> is the identifier ... and F is a vector of n or more elements whose first k elements match P1 through Pk, whose next m - k elements each match Pe, and whose remaining n - m elements match Pm+1 through Pn.
P is a pattern datum (any nonlist, nonvector, nonsymbol datum) and F is equal to P in the sense of the equal? procedure.
When a macro use is transcribed according to the template of the matching <syntax rule>, pattern variables that occur in the template are replaced by the subforms they match in the input.
Pattern data and identifiers that are not pattern variables or ellipses are copied directly into the output. A subtemplate followed by an ellipsis expands into zero or more occurrences of the subtemplate. Pattern variables that occur in subpatterns followed by one or more ellipses may occur only in subtemplates that are followed by (at least) as many ellipses. These pattern variables are replaced in the output by the input subforms to which they are bound, distributed as specified. If a pattern variable is followed by more ellipses in the subtemplate than in the associated subpattern, the input form is replicated as necessary. The subtemplate must contain at least one pattern variable from a subpattern followed by an ellipsis, and for at least one such pattern variable, the subtemplate must be followed by exactly as many ellipses as the subpattern in which the pattern variable appears. (Otherwise, the expander would not be able to determine how many times the subform should be repeated in the output.) It is a syntax violation if the constraints of this paragraph are not met.
A template of the form (<ellipsis> <template>) is identical to <template>, except that ellipses within the template have no special meaning. That is, any ellipses contained within <template> are treated as ordinary identifiers. In particular, the template (... ...) produces a single ellipsis, .... This allows syntactic abstractions to expand into forms containing ellipses.
As an example, if let and cond are defined as in section 9.17 and appendix B then they are hygienic (as required) and the following is not an error.
(let ((=> #f))
The macro transformer for cond recognizes => as a local variable, and hence an expression, and not as the base-library identifier =>, which the macro transformer treats as a syntactic keyword. Thus the example expands into
(let ((=> #f))
instead of
(let ((=> #f))
which would result in an assertion violation.
Syntax: The <id>s must be identifiers. The <template>s must be as for syntax-case.
Semantics: When a keyword is bound to a transformer produced by the first form of identifier-syntax, references to the keyword within the scope of the binding are replaced by <template>.
(define p (cons 4 5))
The second, more general, form of identifier-syntax permits the transformer to determine what happens when set! is used. In this case, uses of the identifier by itself are replaced by <template1>, and uses of set! with the identifier are replaced by <template2>.
(define p (cons 4 5))
A tail callis a procedure call that occurs in a tail context. Tail contexts are defined inductively. Note that a tail context is always determined with respect to a particular lambda expression.
The last expression within the body of a lambda expression, shown as <tail expression> below, occurs in a tail context.
(lambda <formals>
If one of the following expressions is in a tail context, then the subexpressions shown as <tail expression> are in a tail context. These were derived from specifications of the syntax of the forms described in this chapter by replacing some occurrences of <expression> with <tail expression>. Only those rules that contain tail contexts are shown here.
(if <expression> <tail expression> <tail expression>)
If a cond expression is in a tail context, and has a clause of the form (<expression1> => <expression2>) then the (implied) call to the procedure that results from the evaluation of <expression2> is in a tail context. <expression2> itself is not in a tail context.
Certain built-in procedures are also required to perform tail calls. The first argument passed to apply and to call-with-current-continuation, and the second argument passed to call-with-values, must be called via a tail call.
In the following example the only tail call is the call to f. None of the calls to g or h are tail calls. The reference to x is in a tail context, but it is not a call and thus is not a tail call.
(lambda ()
Note: Implementations are allowed, but not required, to recognize that some non-tail calls, such as the call to h above, can be evaluated as though they were tail calls. In the example above, the let expression could be compiled as a tail call to h. (The possibility of h returning an unexpected number of values can be ignored, because in that case the effect of the let is explicitly unspecified and implementation-dependent.)