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dyb 2bc65b5d6d check_dirty_ephemeron now puts ephemerons whose keys haven't yet
been seen on the pending list rather than the trigger lists.
  gc.c
removed scan of space_ephemeron from check_heap because check_heap
as written can't handle the two link fields properly.
  gcwrapper.c
in the ephemerons mat that checks interaction between mutation and
collection, added generation arguments to the first two collect
calls so they always collect into the intended generation.
  4.ms
updated allx and bullyx patches
  patch*

original commit: 43b54f64949cf992e52cf18bacc2a09f4a199227
2017-05-29 20:21:01 -04:00
c check_dirty_ephemeron now puts ephemerons whose keys haven't yet 2017-05-29 20:21:01 -04:00
csug corrections from @jltaylor-us 2017-05-24 09:38:58 -06:00
examples changed copyright year to 2017 2017-04-06 11:41:33 -04:00
makefiles changed copyright year to 2017 2017-04-06 11:41:33 -04:00
mats check_dirty_ephemeron now puts ephemerons whose keys haven't yet 2017-05-29 20:21:01 -04:00
nanopass@1f7e80bcff latest nanopass 2016-06-27 09:45:20 -04:00
release_notes fix overflow detection for fxsll, fxarithmetic-shift-left and fxarithmetic-shift 2017-05-05 15:28:29 -04:00
s make bootfiles 2017-05-24 13:11:40 -06:00
stex@3bd2b86cc5 - compile-whole-program and compile-whole-library now copy the hash-bang 2016-05-04 20:35:38 -04:00
unicode initial upload of open-source release 2016-04-26 10:04:54 -04:00
wininstall renamed install directory to wininstall to avoid conflict with top-level Makefile 2017-01-20 09:50:56 -05:00
zlib@cacf7f1d4e updated zlib to latest version, version 1.2.11 2017-02-13 22:27:21 -05:00
.gitattributes Adding .gitattributes files to correct language stats 2016-10-12 11:47:53 -04:00
.gitignore - Cygwin is now used on Windows, updated mats, eliminated unused killme 2016-06-10 10:07:07 -04:00
.gitmodules - compile-whole-program and compile-whole-library now copy the hash-bang 2016-05-04 20:35:38 -04:00
.travis.yml Re-enabling the other build types. 2017-03-12 14:51:09 -04:00
bintar * updated version to 9.4.1 2016-05-17 00:18:33 -04:00
BUILDING changed copyright year to 2017 2017-04-06 11:41:33 -04:00
CHARTER.md initial upload of open-source release 2016-04-26 10:04:54 -04:00
checkin changed copyright year to 2017 2017-04-06 11:41:33 -04:00
configure changed copyright year to 2017 2017-04-06 11:41:33 -04:00
CONTRIBUTING.md - added custom install options. workarea creates an empty config.h, 2016-05-06 18:30:06 -04:00
LICENSE initial upload of open-source release 2016-04-26 10:04:54 -04:00
LOG check_dirty_ephemeron now puts ephemerons whose keys haven't yet 2017-05-29 20:21:01 -04:00
newrelease changed copyright year to 2017 2017-04-06 11:41:33 -04:00
NOTICE changed copyright year to 2017 2017-04-06 11:41:33 -04:00
README.md expanded on TSPL a bit 2016-06-01 14:24:10 -04:00
scheme.1.in expanded the CSUG description of the handling of command-line 2017-04-11 13:42:58 -07:00
workarea changed copyright year to 2017 2017-04-06 11:41:33 -04:00

Chez Scheme is both a programming language and an implementation of that language, with supporting tools and documentation.

As a superset of the language described in the Revised6 Report on the Algorithmic Language Scheme (R6RS), Chez Scheme supports all standard features of Scheme, including first-class procedures, proper treatment of tail calls, continuations, user-defined records, libraries, exceptions, and hygienic macro expansion.

Chez Scheme also includes extensive support for interfacing with C and other languages, support for multiple threads possibly running on multiple cores, non-blocking I/O, and many other features.

The Chez Scheme implementation consists of a compiler, run-time system, and programming environment. Although an interpreter is available, all code is compiled by default. Source code is compiled on-the-fly when loaded from a source file or entered via the shell. A source file can also be precompiled into a stored binary form and automatically recompiled when its dependencies change. Whether compiling on the fly or precompiling, the compiler produces optimized machine code, with some optimization across separately compiled library boundaries. The compiler can also be directed to perform whole-program compilation, which does full cross-library optimization and also reduces a program and the libraries upon which it depends to a single binary.

The run-time system interfaces with the operating system and supports, among other things, binary and textual (Unicode) I/O, automatic storage management (dynamic memory allocation and generational garbage collection), library management, and exception handling. By default, the compiler is included in the run-time system, allowing programs to be generated and compiled at run time, and storage for dynamically compiled code, just like any other dynamically allocated storage, is automatically reclaimed by the garbage collector.

The programming environment includes a source-level debugger, a mechanism for producing HTML displays of profile counts and program "hot spots" when profiling is enabled during compilation, tools for inspecting memory usage, and an interactive shell interface (the expression editor, or "expeditor" for short) that supports multi-line expression editing.

The R6RS core of the Chez Scheme language is described in The Scheme Programming Language, which also includes an introduction to Scheme and a set of example programs. Chez Scheme's additional language, run-time system, and programming environment features are described in the Chez Scheme User's Guide. The latter includes a shared index and a shared summary of forms, with links where appropriate to the former, so it is often the best starting point.

Get started with Chez Scheme by Building Chez Scheme.

For more information see the Chez Scheme Project Page.