Uhh... okay: - PLT Scheme now supports true multi-core parallelism via futures. Futures create tasks that run in parallel, as long as the tasks stay in the "fast path" of the runtime system. For more information, see:
http://docs.plt-scheme.org/guide/performance.html?q=future#(part._effective-futures) Robby On Thu, Apr 1, 2010 at 9:05 AM, Matthew Flatt <[email protected]> wrote: > At Thu, 01 Apr 2010 04:56:35 -0400, Eli Barzilay wrote: >> Matthew: >> - Futures are on by default >> - wrap each top-level form in a module with a prompt (if visible >> enough) >> - basic set library >> - things from r18375, if visible enough >> - scribble/jfp > > Only futures deserve a bullet I think. Maybe Robby wants to write it? > > _________________________________________________ > For list-related administrative tasks: > http://list.cs.brown.edu/mailman/listinfo/plt-dev > _________________________________________________ For list-related administrative tasks: http://list.cs.brown.edu/mailman/listinfo/plt-dev
