I think that error is a bug in syntax/parse. I have reported it here:

https://github.com/racket/racket/issues/2856 
<https://github.com/racket/racket/issues/2856>

> On Oct 12, 2019, at 21:45, Jonathan Simpson <jjsim...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> I'm not sure exactly why my syntax class wasn't working, but it is working 
> now. I had an extra set of parentheses around the ~between pattern, so it may 
> have been related to that. Whatever the case may be, the non-splicing syntax 
> class is working now.
> 
> I am very close to getting everything working but I am still having trouble 
> using ~between as part of a ~seq. Here's an example:
> 
> (syntax-parse #'(1 2 'bar 4 5 'bar 'foo) [((~seq (~between x:integer 2 2) ... 
> z) ...+ expr) #'foo])
> ; >: contract violation
> ;   expected: real?
> ;   given: #<syntax:stdin::15625 2>
> ;   argument position: 1st
> ;   other arguments...:
> ;    0
> 
> I want to match one or more sequences of two integers and an expression, 
> finally ending in one final expression. This is a contrived example but 
> demonstrates how I'll eventually need to use ~between. The syntax error I'm 
> getting here isn't particularly enlightening.
> 
> Once again, I really appreciate any help here.
> 
> -- Jonathan
> 
> On Saturday, October 12, 2019 at 2:28:05 PM UTC-4, Alexis King wrote:
> I believe your two syntax classes are identical, except for the fact that the 
> splicing variant will not be allowed as a single term pattern. Therefore, I 
> don’t think there’s ever any reason to prefer the splicing version.
> 
> I tried an example using your mag-lvl syntax class with ~between, and it 
> worked fine. This program successfully prints a list of length 3:
> 
> #lang racket
> 
> (require syntax/parse)
> 
> (define-syntax-class mag-lvl
>   (pattern ({~datum level})))
> 
> (syntax-parse #'((level) (level) (level))
>   [((~between lvls:mag-lvl 3 3) ...)
>    (attribute lvls)])
> 
> So I’m not sure what problem you’re bumping into, and it’s not something I 
> can guess without knowing more information.
> 
>> On Oct 12, 2019, at 11:13, Jonathan Simpson <jjsi...@ <>gmail.com 
>> <http://gmail.com/>> wrote:
>> 
>> Regarding my custom syntax-class issue, I realize now that it is probably 
>> because ~between only accepts splicing syntax classes. So, I created one 
>> that matches my regular syntax class. I'm not 100 percent sure that these 
>> are interchangeable in my use case though:
>> 
>> (define-syntax-class mag-lvl
>>     (pattern ({~datum level})))
>> 
>> (define-splicing-syntax-class mag-slvl
>>     (pattern ({~datum level})))
>> 
>> Does anyone know if :mag-slvl is interchangeable with :mag-lvl in most uses? 
>> Are there cases where :mag-slvl won't work the way I expect it to. I'm not 
>> confident in my understanding of the differences between using head patterns 
>> and single term patterns.
>> 
>> -- Jonathan
>> 
>> On Friday, October 11, 2019 at 10:55:19 PM UTC-4, Jonathan Simpson wrote:
>> Thank you Alexis for the clear explanation. I now understand how to use 
>> ~between and it is working for me.
>> 
>> One small hitch I encountered is a custom syntax class I defined doesn't 
>> work in the ~between statement but works elsewhere within the same syntax 
>> pattern. This isn't a huge issue for me as I just copied the pattern in 
>> place of the syntax class but I am curious why the :integer syntax class 
>> works and my custom one doesn't.
>> 
>> Once again, thanks for taking the time to explain this!
>> 
>> -- Jonathan
>> 
>> On Thursday, October 10, 2019 at 11:17:53 PM UTC-4, Alexis King wrote:
>> tl;dr: You need to use an ellipsis, so your pattern should be ((~between 
>> x:integer 3 3) ...). A (much) more detailed explanation of why follows.
>> 
>> ~between is an ellipsis-head pattern. The most common ellipsis-head pattern, 
>> ~optional, also works as a plain head pattern, but ~between does not. What’s 
>> the difference?
>> 
>> Let’s start by answering what a head pattern is. The simplest kind of 
>> syntax/parse pattern is a single-term pattern, which (as the name implies) 
>> only matches a single syntax object at a time. Head patterns are special in 
>> that they can match zero or more consecutive syntax objects in the head of a 
>> list. What is the head of a list? Well, if you have a list like '(1 2 3 4), 
>> its head is the sequence of elements “1 2 3 4” and its tail is simply the 
>> empty list, '(). It’s possible to write the list '(1 2 3 4 . ()) to make 
>> that more explicit.
>> 
>> So when you have a head pattern like (~optional x:integer), it might parse 
>> an integer, but it also might parse nothing. In the latter case, the next 
>> head pattern in the sequence would get a chance to parse the same element 
>> that (~optional x:integer) did. Head patterns are able to do this because 
>> lists introduce a kind of linear sequencing (not just tree-like nesting), so 
>> “skipping” an element is an operation that makes sense.
>> 
>> But what about ellipsis-head patterns? These are patterns that don’t just 
>> appear inside a list pattern, they appear inside a list pattern and under an 
>> ellipsis. For example, in the pattern (x y ... z), x and z are head 
>> patterns, but y is an ellipsis-head pattern. While head patterns introduce 
>> the ability to consume one or more elements at a time, ellipsis-head 
>> patterns extend that with the power to match elements in the list out of 
>> order. This is most useful when parsing keyword options, such as in the 
>> following pattern:
>> 
>>     ((~alt (~once (~seq #:foo foo:integer)) (~once (~seq #:bar bar:string))) 
>> ...)
>> 
>> The above pattern will match (#:foo 1 #:bar "two") or (#:bar "two" #:foo 1), 
>> but not (#:foo 1) or (#:foo 1 #:foo 2 #:bar "three"). This is because ~alt 
>> introduces a set of alternatives that can be matched, but unlike a simple 
>> ~or* pattern, it also keeps track of how many times each case matched, and 
>> patterns like ~once, ~optional, and ~between introduce constraints on the 
>> number of times a given case must match for the overall parse to be 
>> successful.
>> 
>> Interestingly, note that pattern variables bound under ~once and ~optional 
>> don’t have an ellipsis depth of 1, they have an ellipsis depth of 0. This is 
>> why, in the given example, you can refer to the foo and bar pattern 
>> variables in a template without any ellipses. ~between, however, still 
>> increments the ellipsis depth, since the pattern can actually match multiple 
>> times.
>> 
>> In the pattern I suggested at the beginning of this email, ((~between 
>> x:integer 3 3) ...), you’re creating an ellipsis-head context with exactly 
>> one alternative: (~between x:integer 3 3). That is exactly what you want, so 
>> everything works out fine.
>> 
>> The one remaining question, however, is why ~between is only allowed as an 
>> ellipsis-head pattern, but ~optional is also allowed as a head pattern. I 
>> can’t say for certain, since you can think of ((~optional x:integer)) as 
>> being sort of implicitly expanded to ((~optional x:integer) ...), and the 
>> same could be done for ~between. However, my guess is that it isn’t allowed 
>> because ~between increments the ellipsis depth of its sub-pattern, and Ryan 
>> thought it would be confusing for a pattern variable’s ellipsis depth to be 
>> incremented despite there not actually being any ellipses in the pattern. 
>> Therefore, when using ~between, you have to write the ellipsis explicitly.
>> 
>> Alexis
>> 
>>> On Oct 10, 2019, at 20:37, Jonathan Simpson <jjsi...@ <>gmail.com 
>>> <http://gmail.com/>> wrote:
>>> 
>>> This seems like it should be simple but I've never been able to figure out 
>>> how to do this. What I've been doing instead is this:
>>> 
>>> (x:integer ...+) to match two or more integers.
>>> 
>>> (x:integer y:integer ...+) to match three or more.
>>> 
>>> And so on.
>>> 
>>> I'm at a point now where I need to build patterns dynamically to match an 
>>> exact number of elements. I'd also like to avoid having to create unique 
>>> names for a bunch of pattern variables. ~between seems like what I want but 
>>> I haven't been able to get it to work. I've been using ~seq without issue 
>>> but that isn't exactly what I need.
>>> 
>>> Example of an attempt to use ~between:
>>> 
>>> (syntax-parse #'(1 1 1) [((~between x 3 3)) #'(x ...)])
>>> ; stdin::2631: syntax-parse: pattern keyword not allowed here
>>> ;   at: ~between
>>> 
>>> 
>>> Can anyone give me a quick example of how to do this, using ~between or 
>>> otherwise? I'm using syntax-parse, if that makes a difference.
>>> 
>>> Thanks!
>>> 
>>> -- Jonathan
>> 
>> 
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