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I'm saying that there is a larger machinery behind it. It just looks simple.



Well ok but then technically a hello world is complex for the same reasons


I'd say this depends of the complexity of the I/O system.

This was the original claim, which you supported:

'Parsing Lisp in Lisp is so easy because it’s free.'

The example you were pointing to is explicitly calling a parsing engine of Racket via 'read-syntax'. Actually more complicated than the usual s-expression reader - which does only read s-expressions, but has no further idea about Scheme syntax.

Check the usual Scheme report / Racket documentation for the definition of Scheme syntax, syntax objects and its extension mechanisms (macros, ...). I'd say the whole thing is non-trivial. There is a grammar of Scheme, but it is not fixed, because there are extension mechanisms, which make parsing challenging.

It's 'free' because it's a provided language facility - but not free in terms of complexity of the concepts to understand.

And no, the syntax of s-expressions (-> data) is not the syntax of Lisp. It's just the syntax of s-expressions. Search the Scheme report for 'syntax'...


Ah I love computer programmers


I know right?^^




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