Racket version 6.3 is now available from http://racket-lang.org/
- Racket's macro expander uses a new representation of binding called "set of scopes". The new binding model provides a simpler explanation of how macros preserve binding, especially across module boundaries and in hygiene-bending expansions. The new expander is mostly compatible with existing Racket macros, but there are some incompatibilities. For the formally inclined, a research paper on this macro system will appear at POPL next year: http://www.cs.utah.edu/plt/scope-sets/ - Racket's GUI library now uses Gtk+ 3 when available, instead of Gtk+ 2. Set the `PLT_GTK2` environment variable to select Gtk+ 2. - Added a new Redex tutorial based on a week-long workshop in SLC. - Better syntax error checking for Redex patterns that do not use holes correctly. - The blueboxes are more agressive about finding names to look up in the docs, meaning they are useful much more often. - Submodules are now fully supported in Typed Racket. Previously, some uses of submodules would produce internal errors, making it hard to `module+ test` and `module+ main` effectively in Typed Racket. The switch to the set-of-scopes expander fixed these problems, and submodules are now happily at home in Typed Racket. - The `typed/racket/unsafe` library provides import and export forms that circumvent contract generation. This improves performance for typed-untyped interaction at the cost of safety and debuggability. - Typed Racket provides experimental support for units (from `racket/unit`). - The experimental `define-new-subtype` form allows overlaying finer distinctions between otherwise identical types, similar to Haskell's `newtype`. - The `Promise` type constructor changes in a backwards-incompatible way to exclude promises created with `promise/name`. - The `unstable-*` packages are out of the main distribution. Most of their contents have been either merged with established Racket libraries or spun off as their own packages. This change is backwards compatible for packages that properly list their dependencies. Full details: http://blog.racket-lang.org/2015/10/retiring-unstable.html - edu: `big-bang` supports a display-mode clause so that world programs can take over the entire screen. Feedback welcome -- 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.