Directory

Encyclopedia

NodeWorks
                              WEB DIRECTORY

Link Checker

Home
Top : Computers : Programming : Languages : Lisp : Scheme :

Research

  ( 9 )
Research projects and papers on Scheme and Scheme-related topics including Scheme implementation, compilation, syntax, semantics, and derived dialects.

[thumbnail]
1. ICFP '98 Scheme Workshop - Will Clinger's revised (as of 19 Oct 1998) notes on the Scheme Workshop before ICFP '98 in Baltimore. Many of the subjects discussed at the workshop are now under active discussion as SRFIs.
[thumbnail]
2. Interpreter Transformations - Scheme code for Daniel P. Friedman's various transformations on interpreters he presented at the 1996 Scheme Workshop.
[thumbnail]
3. Scheme PLT Publications - Archive contains freely available technical reports and published papers, as well as PhD dissertations, written by members of the Rice Programming Languages Team.
[thumbnail]
4. The Larceny Project - Larceny is a simple and efficient run-time system for Scheme, currently running on the SPARC architecture. A portable implementation that generates C (dubbed "Petit Larceny") is also being developed.
[thumbnail]
5. Three Implementation Models for Scheme - R. Kent Dybvig's PhD dissertation (1987) which presents three implementation models for Scheme, a stack-based model, a string-based model, and a heap-based model.
6. Hygenic Macros through Explicit Renaming - A paper by Will Clinger (1991) which describes an alternative to the low-level macro facility described in the R4RS. The macrology is based upon the explicit renaming of identifiers.
7. Macros in Scheme - A paper by Will Clinger (1991) explaining the Scheme hygenic macro system by comparison with the Common Lisp macrology. In GZipped PostScript form.
8. Macros That Work - A paper by Will Clinger and Jonathan Rees (1991) which describes a modified form of Kohlbecker's algorithm for reliably hygenic macro expansion in block-structured languages where macros are source-to-source transformations specified using a high-level pattern language, all running in O(n) time.
9. Proper Tail Recursion and Space Efficiency - A paper by Will Clinger (1998) which offers an implementation independent definition of proper tail recursion for Scheme. In Gzipped PostScript form.

NodeWorks boosts web surfing!
Page Returned in 0.351 seconds - HTML Compressed 76.5%

Help build the largest human-edited directory on the web.
Submit a Site - Update a Site - Open Directory Project - Become an Editor
 Free thumbnail preview by Thumbshots.org
© 2008 Chamas Enterprises Inc.