Reading on lazy-seq [1]; what exactly does the following piece of code do?
(let foo ((x 10))
(* x x))
TIA,
[1] http://wiki.call-cc.org/eggref/4/lazy-seq
--
Bahman Movaqar
http://BahmanM.com - https://twitter.com/bahman__m
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It is a named let, details here:
http://www.ccs.neu.edu/home/dorai/t-y-scheme/t-y-scheme-Z-H-1.html#node_toc_node_sec_6.2
-Dan
On 16 Dec 2014 13:58, Bahman Movaqar bah...@bahmanm.com wrote:
Reading on lazy-seq [1]; what exactly does the following piece of code
do?
(let foo ((x 10))
On 12/17/2014 01:31 AM, Daniel Leslie wrote:
It is a named let, details here:
http://www.ccs.neu.edu/home/dorai/t-y-scheme/t-y-scheme-Z-H-1.html#node_toc_node_sec_6.2
Thanks Daniel. Exactly what I was looking for.
On 16 Dec 2014 13:58, Bahman Movaqar bah...@bahmanm.com
On Tue, Dec 16, 2014 at 8:05 AM, Dan Leslie d...@ironoxide.ca wrote:
I can imagine that this is something that might be present on more than a
few corporate networks.
Perhaps it's best to simply rename the cock egg?
I'm tempted to write a schlong [1] egg in protest.
[1] Scheme Long
Is there a way to update eggs? I thought it might be chicken-install
-update-dbbut that seems to have a different effect. Is there no
zero-config means of updating eggs aside from manually updating them?
--
Alexej Magura
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