The prohbition against `handle-evt' on `handle-evt' is as
document and as originally intended. I'm not sure why it
was allowed.
Existing programs that use `handle-evt' incorrectly
can break. I found and fixed one incorrect use and one
questionable use in the Racket tree (which is a small
minority of the uses of `handle-evt' in the tree).
original commit: 084278fabcb3416250d7155faef674a31dac60b6
There is a big comment in thread.rkt that explains the problem and the
"fix". I think something better could and should be done, but I don't
know what it is.
original commit: 022ce2d8d7de60d63d21eb67119466283d9e8be3
* Move the `X-Mailer' header to the top, so that the interesting headers
are all together at the bottom (the top gets littered by server
headers anyway).
* Use `subprocess' directly (`process*' wasn't really doing anything
more than that).
* Allow the sender to be `#f', leaving the header out. This makes all
sendmails that I've used use the username that is running the process.
* Just search for a sendmail program: don't barf on windows, so it can
be used in case there is a sendmail.exe executable there.
* Remove `no-mail-recipients' to make it in-line with other racket code
that doesn't raise super-specific exceptions.
* Use port counting instead of doing the counts manually, much simpler
code.
original commit: f9d07d84009e69a0202390fd828c00d330c19611
This library is used by Redex, which wants a `syntax'-like template
language, but for datum values instead of syntax objects. Using
`datum-case' and `datum' generates much less code. Redex uses
only a small part of the general functionality, so adding
`syntax/datum' could be overkill. It's implemented by generalizing
the `syntax-case' and `syntax' pattern matching and template
constructing code, though; it's not a lot of extra code, and it's
easiest to generalize completely. We may find other uses for
datum templates, too.
original commit: 25dd8727cb8aca54dc7c5cbf1814f2049234ad1d
The `date*' structure type is an extension of `date' with
`nanosecond' and `time-zone-name' fields.
The `seconds->date' function now accepts a real and returns a
`date*'. The fractional part of its argument goes into the
`nanosecond' field.
original commit: ac8990d5195312fa7c71966bdfaa925905902ca8
Macros and other tools that need syntax privilege used
`(current-code-inspector)' at the module top-level to try to
capture the right code inspector at load time. It's more
consistent to instead use the enclosing module's declaration-time
inspector, and `var-ref->mod-decl-insp' provides that. The
new function works only on references to anonymous variables,
which limits access to the inspector.
The real function name is longer, of course.
original commit: 0197902309c5400d463393829a88282c627dafd2