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Re: Help with Learning Programming and LISP
From: |
Zelphir Kaltstahl |
Subject: |
Re: Help with Learning Programming and LISP |
Date: |
Wed, 11 Sep 2019 23:24:24 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:60.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/60.8.0 |
There is at least one SRFI for a unit test library. Is that sufficient
as "support for TDD"?
https://srfi.schemers.org/srfi-64/srfi-64.html
On 9/11/19 10:53 PM, Viet Le wrote:
> Thanks for your recommendation. May I ask if Scheme has support for
> TDD or are there any TDD libraries/frameworks in Scheme? A quick
> online search didn’t show desired results. I found only TDD for Clojure.
>
> Thanks,
> Viet
>
> On Tue, 10 Sep 2019 at 22:24, Zelphir Kaltstahl
> <address@hidden <mailto:address@hidden>> wrote:
>
> I would like to add "The Little Schemer" to the list of good books
> suggested here. Damn did I get a lot out of that little book. It
> starts
> at the very beginning, but accelerates quickly.
>
> I would say I got more out of SICP than The Little Schemer, but
> both are
> phenomenal books in my opinion. SICP has many many pages and
> covers many
> topics. More than are treated in The Little Schemer, but the
> content in
> The Little Schemer is very enlightening as well, just like many things
> in SICP were for me. In The Little Schemer I read multiple chapters
> multiple times to get a better understanding and often was rewarded by
> understanding it better and even better, when I later typed that code
> into my machine and wrote comments for everything. I am far from
> finished with SICP, but I had a lot of "Aha!" moments with it too.
> Both
> highly recommended books, but they might take also some time to get
> through, if you have a job and not much time to spend on the books.
>
> Haven't read Practical Common Lisp.
>
> Realm of Racket was a little disappointing for me personally, as in my
> version there was some code missing and thus some example did not work
> (the procedure `decay` is missing in my book). I also did not buy
> in to
> the "Big bang" thingy that much. I would have preferred to write
> something on top of a minimalistic 2D engine instead. In general
> is it a
> nice idea though, to get content across by writing small games.
>
> I still have PAIP (Paradigms of Artificial Intelligence Programming)
> here and am not sure how to sort it in. So far it has been good
> content,
> but I also have not progressed very far into it yet. I am
> rewriting the
> code in Scheme so far, when I try out the code of it.
>
>
> --
> Kind regards,
> Viet
- Re: Help with Learning Programming and LISP, (continued)