This library is designed to smooth over some of the small idiosyncrasies and inconsistencies in Racket, so that those new to Racket are more likely to say ``ah, that makes sense'' rather than ``huh? what?''
A @defterm{datum} is a literal representation of a single unit of Racket code, also known as an @defterm{S-expression}. Unlike a string, a datum preserves the internal structure of the S-expression. Meaning, if the S-expression is a single value, or list-shaped, or tree-shaped, so is its corresponding datum.
Datums are made with @racket[quote] or its equivalent notation, the @litchar{'} prefix (see @secref["quote" #:doc '(lib "scribblings/guide/guide.scrbl")]).
When I use ``datum'' in its specific Racket sense, I use ``datums'' as its plural rather than ``data'' because that term has an existing, more generic meaning.
Similar to @racket[format], but the template @racket[datum-form] is a datum, rather than a string, and the function returns a datum, rather than a string. Otherwise, the same formatting escapes can be used in the template (see @racket[fprintf]).
Two special cases. First, a string that describes a list of datums is parenthesized so the result is a single datum. Second, an empty string returns @racket[void] (not @racket[#f], because that's a legitimate datum).
Like @racket[format-datum], but applies @racket[datum-form] to the lists of @racket[vals] in similar way to @racket[map], where values for the format string are taken from the lists of @racket[vals] in parallel. This means that a) @racket[datum-form] must accept as many arguments as there are lists of @racket[vals], and b) the lists of @racket[vals] must all have the same number of items.
Print the name and value of @racket[expr] to @racket[current-error-port], but also return the evaluated result of @racket[expr] as usual. This lets you see the value of an expression or variable at runtime without disrupting any of the surrounding code. Optionally, you can use @racket[maybe-name] to change the name shown in @racket[current-error-port].
But be careful —in the example below, the result of the @racket[if] expression will be skipped in favor of the last expression, which will be the value of @racket[x]:
A variant of @racket[report] for use with @secref["stx-obj" #:doc '(lib "scribblings/guide/guide.scrbl")]. Rather than print the whole object (as @racket[report] would), @racket[report-datum] prints only the datum inside the syntax object, but the return value is the whole syntax object.
Define a function that behaves differently depending on how many arguments are supplied (also known as @seclink["Evaluation_Order_and_Arity" #:doc '(lib "scribblings/guide/guide.scrbl")]{@italic{arity}}). Like @racket[cond], you can have any number of branches. Each branch starts with a @racket[_pat] that accepts a certain number of arguments. If the current invocation of the function matches the number of arguments in @racket[_pat], then the @racket[_body] on the right-hand side is evaluated. If there is no matching case, an arity error arises. (Derived from @racket[case-lambda], whose notation you might prefer.)
If the first argument is an identifier @racket[id] and the second a syntaxed identifier that looks like @racket[(syntax other-id)], create a rename transformer, which is a fancy term for ``macro that replaces @racket[id] with @racket[other-id].'' (This subform is equivalent to @racket[make-rename-transformer].)
Why do we need rename transformers? Because an ordinary macro operates on its whole calling expression (which it receives as input) like @racket[(macro-name this-arg that-arg . and-so-on)]. By contrast, a rename transformer operates only on the identifier itself (regardless of where that identifier appears in the code). It's like making one identifier into an alias for another identifier.
If the first argument is an @racket[id] and the second a single-argument function, create a macro called @racket[id] that uses the function as a syntax transformer. This function must return a @seclink["stx-obj" #:doc '(lib "scribblings/guide/guide.scrbl")]{syntax object}, otherwise you'll trigger an error. Beyond that, the function can do whatever you like. (This subform is equivalent to @racket[define-syntax].)
Similar to the previous subform, but @racket[transformer-id] holds an existing transformer function. Note that @racket[transformer-id] needs to be visible during compile time (aka @italic{phase 1}), so use @racket[define-for-syntax] or equivalent.
If the first argument is an @racket[id] and the second a @racket[syntax-object], create a syntax transformer that returns @racket[syntax-object]. This is just alternate notation for the previous subform, wrapping @racket[syntax-object] inside a function body. The effect is to create a macro from @racket[id] that always returns @racket[syntax-object], regardless of how it's invoked. Not especially useful within programs. Mostly handy for making quick macros at the REPL.
If the first argument is a @seclink["stx-patterns" #:doc '(lib "scribblings/reference/reference.scrbl")]{syntax pattern} starting with @racket[id], then create a syntax transformer for this pattern using @racket[result-expr ...] as the return value. As usual, @racket[result-expr ...] needs to return a @seclink["stx-obj" #:doc '(lib "scribblings/guide/guide.scrbl")]{syntax object} or you'll get an error.
The syntax-pattern notation is the same as @racket[syntax-case], with one key difference. If a @racket[pat-arg] has a @tt{CAPITALIZED-NAME}, it's treated as a named wildcard (meaning, it will match any expression in that position, and can be subsequently referred to by that name). Otherwise, @racket[pat-arg] is treated as a literal (meaning, it will only match the same expression).
The ellipsis @racket[...] can be used with a wildcard to match a list of arguments. Please note: though a wildcard standing alone must match one argument, once you add an ellipsis, it's allowed to match zero:
The capitalization requirement for a wildcard @racket[pat-arg] makes it easy to mix literals and wildcards in one pattern. But it also makes it easy to mistype a pattern and not get the wildcard you were expecting. Below, @racket[bad-squarer] doesn't work because @racket[any-number] is meant to be a wildcard. But it's not capitalized, so it's considered a literal, and it triggers an error:
@;{You can use the special identifier @racket[caller-stx] —available only within the body of @racket[define-macro] —to access the original input argument to the macro.}
This subform of @racket[define-macro] is useful for macros that have one calling pattern. To make a macro with multiple calling patterns, see @racket[define-macro-cases].
Create a macro called @racket[id] with multiple branches, each with a @racket[pattern] on the left and @racket[result-expr] on the right. The input to the macro is tested against each @racket[pattern]. If it matches, then @racket[result-expr] is evaluated.
As with @racket[define-macro], wildcards in each syntax pattern must be @tt{CAPITALIZED}. Everything else is treated as a literal match, except for the ellipsis @racket[...] and the wildcard @racket[_].
@examples[#:eval my-eval
(define-macro-cases yogurt
[(yogurt) #'(displayln (format "No toppings? Really?"))]
[(yogurt TOPPING)
#'(displayln (format "Sure, you can have ~a." 'TOPPING))]
[(yogurt TOPPING ANOTHER-TOPPING ... please)
#'(displayln (format "Since you asked nicely, you can have ~a toppings."
(length '(TOPPING ANOTHER-TOPPING ...))))]
[(yogurt TOPPING ANOTHER-TOPPING ...)
#'(displayln (format "Whoa! Rude people only get one topping."))])
For use within a language reader. Automatically @racket[define] and @racket[provide] the @racket[read] and @racket[read-syntax] functions needed for the reader's public interface. @racket[reader-result-expr] can return either a syntax object or a datum (which will be converted to a syntax object).
The generated @racket[read-syntax] function takes two arguments, a path and an input port. It returns a syntax object stripped of all bindings.
The generated @racket[read] function takes one argument, an input port. It calls @racket[read-syntax] and converts the result to a datum.