On Sat, 11 Oct 2008, Jörg F. Wittenberger wrote:
Am Freitag, den 10.10.2008, 11:19 -0700 schrieb Elf:
i'd recommend the r5rs primitive 'write' instead of 'display', 'printf', etc,
if you want the external representation of your code. :)
That's what would have recommended until a few weeks ago
Am Freitag, den 10.10.2008, 11:19 -0700 schrieb Elf:
> i'd recommend the r5rs primitive 'write' instead of 'display', 'printf', etc,
> if you want the external representation of your code. :)
That's what would have recommended until a few weeks ago, when I found
"write" to be the source of an inco
i'd recommend the r5rs primitive 'write' instead of 'display', 'printf', etc,
if you want the external representation of your code. :)
-elf
On Fri, 10 Oct 2008, Wietse Jacobs wrote:
2008/10/10 Peter Bex <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
On Fri, Oct 10, 2008 at 04:04:13PM +0200, Wietse Jacobs wrote:
(d
2008/10/10 Peter Bex <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> On Fri, Oct 10, 2008 at 04:04:13PM +0200, Wietse Jacobs wrote:
>> (display (command-line-arguments))
>
> That's (kind of) a limitation of how 'display' works.
> #;1> (display (list "foo" "bar"))
> (foo bar)
>
> Instead, you want:
> #;2> (printf "~S" (li
Hi Wietse
On Fri, 10 Oct 2008 16:04:13 +0200 "Wietse Jacobs" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've put the following in a file and compiled it with chicken:
>
> (begin
> (display (command-line-arguments))
> (exit))
>
> when I run this with:
> test.exe "1 argument"
> I get:
> (1 argument)
>
> B
On Fri, Oct 10, 2008 at 04:04:13PM +0200, Wietse Jacobs wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I've put the following in a file and compiled it with chicken:
>
> (begin
> (display (command-line-arguments))
> (exit))
>
> when I run this with:
> test.exe "1 argument"
> I get:
> (1 argument)
>
> But this looks l
Hello,
I've put the following in a file and compiled it with chicken:
(begin
(display (command-line-arguments))
(exit))
when I run this with:
test.exe "1 argument"
I get:
(1 argument)
But this looks like a list of 2 arguments where I expected 1. Am I
missing something?
(I'm on windows XP,