On Oct 16, 2015, at 9:24 AM, Konrad Hinsen <konrad.hin...@fastmail.net> wrote:

> Matthias Felleisen writes:
> 
>>> For me the strongest point of Racket is that it encourages linguistic
>>> diversity while maintaining (nearly enforcing) interoperability.  My
>>> dream language environment would go one step further and provide a
>>> second more low-level interoperability layer for performance-oriented
>>> dialects (C/Fortran style).
>> 
>> 
>> Does the existing FFI provide you with enough efficiency when needed? 
> 
> Yes, but I have to write C code outside of Racket. I'd like to be able
> to define a #lang in Racket that operates at the level of C
> (i.e. machine-level data types, no GC, etc.), and I'd like to generate
> specialized code in that low-level language from my standard Racket
> code.


Yes, we want to get there. See "full spectrum language" in other reply. 





> Lush (http://lush.sourceforge.net/) has something like that but it
> seems kind of dead now. A while ago I saw the annoucement for a new
> language called Terra (http://terralang.org/) that is a low-level
> complement to Lua, but I haven't taken a closer look yet.

Thanks 

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Racket Users" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to racket-users+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to