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         Scheme Programming:     more books (88)
  1. Simulation of decentralized planning in two Danish organizations using the decomposition scheme from linear programming (Skrifter fra Institut for historie ... universitet : Samfundsvidenskab ; nr. 37) by John Christensen, 1976
  2. Simply Scheme - 2nd Edition: Introducing Computer Science by Brian Harvey, Matthew Wright, 1999-08-27
  3. Tolerance representation scheme for a three-dimensional product in an object-oriented programming environment.: An article from: IIE Transactions by Utpal Roy, Ying-Che Fang, 1996-10-01
  4. Recueil de petits problèmes en Scheme (SCOPOS) by L. Moreau, C. Queinnec, et all 1999-09-15
  5. Pc Scheme to Accompany Appleby: Programming Languages:paradigm and Practice by Hull, 1991
  6. A radomization scheme for speeding up algorithms for linear and convex programming problems with high constraints-to-variables ratio (DIMACS technical report) by Ilan Adler, 1989
  7. A semantic algebra for logic programming (Technical report / Computer Science Dept., Indiana University) by Mitchell Wand, 1983
  8. Prototyping Data Flow by translation into Scheme (Technical report / Computer Science Dept., Indiana University) by Pee-Hong Chen, 1983
  9. Designing a majorization scheme for the recourse function in two-stage stochastic linear programming (Technical report / Dept. of Computer Science and Engineering, Southern Methodist University) by José H Dulá, 1992
  10. LOG(F): A new scheme for integrating rewrite rules, logic programming and lazy evaluation (Report. University of California, Los Angeles. Computer Science Dept) by Sanjai Narain, 1987
  11. Linear Programming and Genetic Algorithm Based Optimization for the Weighting Scheme of a Value Focused Thinking Hierarchy
  12. Exploring Computer Science with Scheme (Undergraduate Texts in Computer Science) by Oliver Grillmeyer, 1998-10-30
  13. Lisp in Small Pieces by Christian Queinnec, 2003-12-04
  14. PC Scheme: User's Guide and Language Reference Manual - Trade Edition by Texas Instruments, 1990-05-29

41. Scheme Programming Language - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
scheme programming language. The scheme programming language is a functional programming language which is a dialect of Lisp. It
http://www.phatnav.com/wiki/wiki.phtml?title=Scheme_programming_language

42. Powell's Books - The Scheme Programming Language: ANSI Scheme By Kent Dybbig
The scheme programming Language ANSI Scheme by Kent Dybbig. Publisher Comments Scheme is a general purpose programming language descended from Algol and Lisp.
http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/partner?partner_id=26820&cgi=product&isbn=0134546

43. Citations The Scheme Programming Language - Dybvig (ResearchIndex
R. Kent Dybvig. The scheme programming Language. PrenticeHall, 1987. R. Kent Dybvig. The scheme programming Language. Prentice-Hall, 1987.
http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/context/22041/0

44. Free Software Directory: Scheme Programming Language
FSF / UNESCO Free Software Directory. 2,998 packages indexed. Up . Top Software development Programming languages scheme programming language.
http://gnu.fyxm.net/directory/devel/prog/scheme/
FSF UNESCO Free Software Directory
2,998 packages indexed Top Software development Programming languages Scheme programming language Bigloo - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2 or later] - 2004-03-16
Implementation of the Scheme programming language Chicken - [a 3-clause BSD-style license] - 2004-02-03
Scheme to C compiler DrScheme - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2 or later] - 2004-02-10
GUI Scheme development environment Glame - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2] - 2004-01-13
Sound editor GOOPS - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2 or later] - 2002-01-24
Object-oriented extension to 'guile' Guile - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2 or later] - 2004-03-22
GNU extensibility library Hobbit - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2] - 2004-02-04
Scheme to C compiler Kawa - [Kawa] - 2002-04-11
Scheme and Emacs Lisp on a Java VM MIT Scheme - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2 or later] - 2002-06-18
MIT Scheme programming language qscheme - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2 or later] - 2001-01-29
Implementation of Scheme written in C Scheme 48 - [a 3-clause BSD-style license] - 2002-05-02 Scheme implementation SISC - [MPL *or* GPLv2] - 2004-01-20 Java-based Scheme interpreter SX - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2] - 2003-03-27

45. Free Software Directory: Scheme Programming Language
FSF / UNESCO Free Software Directory. 3,157 packages indexed. Up . Top Software development Programming languages scheme programming language.
http://gnuweb.binarycompass.org/directory/devel/prog/Scheme_programming_language
FSF UNESCO Free Software Directory
3,221 packages indexed Top Software development Programming languages Scheme programming language Bigloo - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2 or later] - 2004-03-16
Implementation of the Scheme programming language Chicken - [a 3-clause BSD-style license] - 2004-02-03
Scheme to C compiler DrScheme - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2 or later] - 2004-05-19
GUI Scheme development environment Glame - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2] - 2004-01-13
Sound editor GOOPS - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2 or later] - 2002-01-24
Object-oriented extension to 'guile' Guile - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2 or later] - 2004-03-22
GNU extensibility library Hobbit - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2] - 2004-02-04
Scheme to C compiler Kawa - [Kawa] - 2004-06-08
Scheme and Emacs Lisp on a Java VM MIT Scheme - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2 or later] - 2002-06-18
MIT Scheme programming language qscheme - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2 or later] - 2001-01-29
Implementation of Scheme written in C Scheme 48 - [a 3-clause BSD-style license] - 2002-05-02 Scheme implementation SISC - [MPL *or* GPLv2] - 2004-04-12 Java-based Scheme interpreter SX - [The GNU General Public License, Version 2] - 2003-03-27

46. Scheme Programming Language - InformationBlast
scheme programming language Information Blast. scheme programming language. The with. Scheme encourages functional programming.
http://www.informationblast.com/Scheme_programming_language.html
Scheme programming language
The Scheme programming language is a functional programming language and a dialect of Lisp . It was developed by Guy L. Steele and Gerald Jay Sussman in the and introduced to the academic world via a series of papers now referred to as Sussman and Steele's Lambda Papers Scheme's philosophy is unashamedly minimalist . Its goal is not to pile feature upon feature, but to remove weaknesses and restrictions that make new features appear necessary. Therefore, Scheme provides as few primitive notions as possible, and lets everything else be implemented on top of them. For example, the main mechanism for governing control flow is tail recursion Scheme was the first variety of Lisp to use lexical variable scoping (as opposed to dynamic variable scoping ) exclusively. It was also one of the first programming languages to support explicit continuations . Scheme supports garbage collection of unreferenced data. It uses lists as the primary data structure, but also has good support for arrays. Owing to the minimalist specification, there is no standard syntax for creating structures with named fields, or for doing object oriented programming , but many individual implementations have such features.

47. Understanding Memory Allocation Of Scheme Programs
Understanding memory allocation of scheme programs. 18 M. Serrano. Bee an Integrated Development Environment for the scheme programming Language.
http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=351264&dl=ACM&coll=portal&CFID=11111111&CF

48. The Scheme Programming Language
The scheme programming Language ANSI Scheme, 2nd edition. From the Publisher Scheme is a general purpose programming language descended from Algol and Lisp.
http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=525334&dl=ACM&coll=portal&CFID=11111111&CF

49. Class 2: Scheme Programming Primer
CprS376 Schedule CprS376 Class 1 CprS376 Class 3 scheme programming Primer Class 2 Section 1.1. Contents
http://cparrish.sewanee.edu/cs376/class02.html
CprS376 Schedule
CprS376 Class 1

CprS376 Class 3
Scheme Programming Primer Class 2 - Section 1.1
Contents
Getting Started Reading through the following transcript should give you a quick introduction to the interactive nature of Scheme programming and a number of the most fundamental and useful scheme programmming constructs. Note that this transcript was prepared using a different scheme interpreter, so you may see slight variations when using Petite Chez Scheme. ) ... (else ( >>> (lambda (obj) (cond ((symbol? obj) 'symbol) ((number? obj) 'number) (else 'something-else))) # Notions of Equivalence in Scheme Most scheme programming constructs seem quite straightforward, but there are certain subtleties involved in scheme's notions of equivalence and equality. ;; equivalence.ss ;; = = = = = FLAVORS OF EQUALITY = = = = = ;; for numbers >>> (= 45 (+ 40 5)) #t ;; for symbols >>> (eq? 'a (car '(a b c))) #t ;; for numbers, symbols, booleans >>> (eqv? #f (= 2 3)) #t ;; for all of the above, and lists as well >>> (equal? ( >> (equal? '(a b c d) '(a b c 3)) #f ; = = = = = SUMMARY OF EQUIVALENCE = = = = = ; the operators: =, eq?, eqv?, equal? ; = tests sameness of numbers ; eq? tests sameness of symbols ; note: each application of cons constructs a new cell ; (eq? (cons 1 2) (cons 1 2)) returns #f! ; eqv? tests sameness of numbers, symbols and booleans ; (as well as vectors, strings, and chars) ; equal? is a universal test for sameness ; (tests all of the above and lists as well) ; note: (equal? (cons 1 2) (cons 1 2)) returns #t! ; the difference is mainly one of efficiency ; use the predicate designed for the task at hand

50. Class 1: Scheme Programming In A Linux Environment
scheme programming in a Linux Environment Class 1 Chapter 1. You are now ready to use emacs to compose and run your scheme programs.
http://cparrish.sewanee.edu/cs376/class01.html
CprS376 Schedule
CprS376 Class 2
Scheme Programming in a Linux Environment Class 1 - Chapter 1
Contents
In order to enjoy programming with Scheme on a machine running the Linux operating sytem, you will first need to obtain an account on such a machine (see Prof. Parrish) and then you will need to become familiar with a few basic operations:
  • Logging in (login name and password)
  • Filesystem commands (pwd, ls, ls -l, mkdir, cd, rmdir, cp, mv, rm)
  • Using the emacs editor
  • Configuring emacs to facilitate programming with Petite Chez Scheme
  • (Optional) Configuring bash (the shell that interprets commmands) to facilitate programming with mit-scheme
  • Using zip and unzip to archive file systems and expand such archives
  • Using ftp to transfer files from one machine to another
  • Logging out

Exercise: Use Petite Chez Scheme To Run Several Scheme Programs To invoke the scheme interpreter, type

51. Festival's Scheme Programming Language
Chapter 24. Festival s scheme programming Language. The scheme programming language is a dialect of Lisp designed to be more consistent.
http://festvox.org/bsv/c3652.html
Building Synthetic Voices
Chapter 24. Festival's Scheme Programming Language
This chapter acts as a reference guide for the particular dialect of the Scheme programming language used in the Festival Speech Synthesis systems. The Scheme programming language is a dialect of Lisp designed to be more consistent. It was chosen for the basic scripting language in Festival because: Having a scripting language in Festival is actually one of the fundamental properties that makes Festival a useful system. The fact that new voices and languages in many cases can be added without changing the underlying C++ code makes the system mouch more powerful and accessible than a more monolithic system that requires recompilation for any parameter changes. As there is sometimes confusion we should make it clear that Festival contains its own Scheme interpreter as part of the system. Festival can be view as a Scheme interpreter that has had basic addition to its function to include modules that can do speech synthesis, no external Scheme interperter is required to use Festival. The actual interpreter used in Festival is based on George Carret's SIOD, "Scheme in one Defun". But this has been substantially enhanced from its small elegant beginnings into something that might be better called "Scheme in one directory". Although there is a standard for Scheme the version in Festival does not fully follow it, for both good and bad reasons. Thus finding in order for people to be able to program in Festival's Scheme we provide this chapter to list the core type, functions, etc and some examples. We do not pretend to be teaching programming here but as we know many people who are interested in building voices are not primarily programmers, some guidance on the language and its usage will make the simple programming that is required in building voices, more accessible.

52. The Scheme Programming Language, CS, Univ. Of Kiel, Germany
DrScheme is a complete scheme programming environment that runs on major Unix platforms, Windows, and the Macintosh. It includes
http://www.informatik.uni-kiel.de/~scheme/
Institute of Computer Science and Applied Mathematics
in the Faculty of Engineering of Christian-Albrechts-University of Kiel
Scheme
Scheme is a statically scoped and properly tail-recursive dialect of the Lisp programming language invented by Guy Lewis Steele Jr. and Gerald Jay Sussman . It was designed to have an exceptionally clear and simple semantics and few different ways to form expressions. A wide variety of programming paradigms, including imperative, functional, and message passing styles, find convenient expression in Scheme. Scheme was one of the first programming languages to incorporate first class procedures as in the lambda calculus, thereby proving the usefulness of static scope rules and block structure in a dynamically typed language. Scheme was the first major dialect of Lisp to distinguish procedures from lambda expressions and symbols, to use a single lexical environment for all variables, and to evaluate the operator position of a procedure call in the same way as an operand position. By relying entirely on procedure calls to express iteration, Scheme emphasized the fact that tail-recursive procedure calls are essentially goto's that pass arguments. Scheme was the first widely used programming language to embrace first class escape procedures, from which all previously known sequential control structures can be synthesized. More recently, building upon the design of generic arithmetic in Common Lisp, Scheme introduced the concept of exact and inexact numbers.

53. Scheme Programming Assignment, Honors Programming Languages
Honors Programming Languages G22.3033.03 Fall 1999 scheme programming Assignment Due Monday, October 25. Implement a Scheme interpreter.
http://www.cs.nyu.edu/courses/fall99/G22.3110-001/scheme_assignment.html
Honors Programming Languages
G22.3033.03 Fall 1999
Scheme programming Assignment
Due Monday, October 25
Implement a Scheme interpreter. The first thing you should do is understand the mini-scheme interpreter that I gave you in class. Then, rewrite a more complete interpreter from scratch (more or less). It should have all the features that I discussed in class, primarily define (including the special syntax for defining functions conveniently), lambda if cond let letrec let* , and quote In addition, you must also implement macros . These are functions that transform syntactic entities before they are evaluated. In particular, they take expressions (represented as atoms or lists) as arguments and return an expression as the result. The result expression is then evaluated. Here is the syntax I want you to use:
name param param n body
When a macro is applied, the arguments are NOT evaluated. Rather the argument expressions are passed. The body then returns an atom or list, which is evaluated. For example,
(define-macro (strange-mult a b) (list '* a (list '- b 1)))
means that when you type
(strange-mult (+ 3 2) (+ x y))
a gets bound to the list b gets bound to the list (+ x y) , and the result of the macro is
(* (+ 3 2) (- (+ x y) 1)) This expression is then evaluated.

54. Scheme Programming Assignment, Honors Programming Languages
Honors Programming Languages G22.3033.03 Fall 2003 scheme programming Assignment Due Monday, October 20. Your assignment is to implement a Scheme interpreter.
http://www.cs.nyu.edu/courses/fall03/G22.3110-001/scheme_assignment.html
Honors Programming Languages
G22.3033.03 Fall 2003
Scheme programming Assignment
Due Monday, October 20
Your assignment is to implement a Scheme interpreter. The first thing you should do is understand the mini-scheme interpreter that is on the course web page. Then, rewrite a more complete interpreter from scratch (more or less). It should have all the features that I discussed in class, primarily define (including the special syntax for defining functions conveniently), lambda if cond let letrec let* , and quote In addition, you must also implement macros . These are functions that transform syntactic entities before they are evaluated. In particular, they take expressions (represented as atoms or lists) as arguments and return an expression as the result. The result expression is then evaluated. Here is the syntax I want you to use:
name param param n body
When a macro is applied, the arguments are NOT evaluated. Rather the argument expressions are passed. The body then returns an atom or list, which is evaluated. For example,
(define-macro (strange-mult a b) (list '* a (list '- b 1)))
means that when you type
(strange-mult (+ 3 2) (+ x y))
a gets bound to the list b gets bound to the list (+ x y) , and the result of the macro is
(* (+ 3 2) (- (+ x y) 1)) This expression is then evaluated.

55. The Lisp And Scheme Programming Languages
Next / Previous / Index / TCC Help System / Publications / Site map / NM Tech homepage The Lisp and scheme programming languages. Lisp dialects.
http://infohost.nmt.edu/tcc/help/lang/lisp/homepage.html
Next Previous Index TCC Help System ... NM Tech homepage
The Lisp and Scheme programming languages
Lisp dialects
Lisp , an acronym for Lis t P rocessing, is simultaneously one of the most modern and one of the oldest and most venerable of programming languages. Its strengths are in its clear, simple structure and its great flexibility. It is often used in research and development, yet it has also been used for huge commercial packages (such as Interleaf
Scheme
Scheme is a recent language in the Lisp family that is very popular for instruction and real-world applications.
  • We have a Scheme interprete called scm available on Linux and Sparc architectures. Please refer to the man page
  • www.schemers.org

56. Scheme Programming With MIT/GNU Scheme
scheme programming with MIT/GNU Scheme. The Scheme Category at the Open Directory Project Web sites related to the scheme programming language.
http://www.uvm.edu/~ashawley/scheme/
Scheme Programming with MIT/GNU Scheme
Scheme is a programming language. It is a dialect (derivative) of Lisp . It was originally developed by Guy Steele and Gerald Sussman in 1975. It is a functional programming and languages and has lexical scoping tail-recursion applicative order reduction first-class functions, first-class continuations garbage collection and provides lambda calculus References above are to the Free On Line Dictionary of Computing ( FOLDOC
Sites on Using MIT/GNU Scheme
Sites on Learning Scheme

57. Scheme Programming Language, The: ANSI Scheme, 2/E - Prentice Hall Catalog
Advanced scheme programming and Implementation *CS 491/591 Advanced scheme programming and Implementation *. Instructor Lance Williams williams@cs.unm.edu Time TR 200315
http://www.prenhall.com/books/ptr_0134546466.html
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58. Help-Site: Scheme Programming Computer Help
scheme programming. Search.
http://help-site.com/c.m/prog/lang/scheme/
[Main Index] -> [Programming] -> [Programming Languages] [Directory] [Forums] Scheme Programming
Search
options If you can't find the help you are looking for on the main site you can now visit the new Help-Site Forums to ask for help. Save 10% on high-quality Crucial RAM. Order online at Crucial's factory-direct Web site. Crucial Technology, The Memory Experts. [New Links]
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59. Bookpool: The Scheme Programming Language, 3rd Edition
The scheme programming Language, 3rd Edition, The scheme programming Language stands alone as an introduction to and essential reference for Scheme programmers.
http://www.bookpool.com/.x/z4hsw8kbz8/sm/0262541483
0 items Search Subjects New Releases ... LogOut Search: Browse: Business Certification Computer Applications Databases Distributed Computing Enterprise Computing Graphics and Multimedia Hardware Networking / Comm Operating Platforms Other Topics Programming Programming Languages WWW and Internet Jun 11, 2004 EDT
The Scheme Programming Language, 3rd Edition
R. Kent Dybvig
MIT Press, Paperback, 3rd edition, Published October 2003, 295 pages, ISBN 0262541483 List Price: $35.00
Our Price:
You Save: $7.50 (21% Off)
Availability: In-Stock Be the First to Write a Review and tell the world about this title! People who purchase this book frequently purchase: Books on similar topics, in best-seller order: Books from the same publisher, in best-seller order: Publisher Summary of Title This thoroughly updated edition of The Scheme Programming Language provides an introduction to Scheme and a definitive reference for standard Scheme, presented in a clear and concise manner. Written for professionals and students with some prior programming experience, it begins by leading the programmer gently through the basics of Scheme and continues with an introduction to some of the more advanced features of the language. Many exercises are presented to help reinforce the lessons learned, and answers to the exercises are given in a new appendix. Most of the remaining chapters are dedicated to the reference material, which describes in detail the standard features of Scheme included in the Revised Report on Scheme and the ANSI/IEEE standard for Scheme.

60. The Scheme Programming Language
The scheme programming Language Third Edition, The scheme programming Language Third Edition by Authors R. Kent Dybvig Released 01 October, 2003 ISBN
http://www.wkonline.com/a/The_Scheme_Programming_Language__Third_Edition_0262541
Book > The Scheme Programming Language The Scheme Programming Language
by Authors: R. Kent Dybvig,Jean-Pierre Hebert
Released: 01 October, 2003
ISBN: 0262541483
Paperback
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The Scheme Programming Language > Customer Reviews: The Scheme Programming Language > Related Products
The Little Schemer - 4th Edition

The Seasoned Schemer
How to Design Programs: An Introduction to Programming and Computing Essentials of Programming Languages - 2nd Edition ... Web Knowledge Online - 1997-2003 > The Scheme Programming Language

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