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  • Racket is a mature and stable product. From the beginning, it has supported cross-platform graphical programming (Windows, macOS, Linux).

    Racket includes a rich set of libraries, covering the full range from web server apps to mathematics and scientific simulation software.

    In Racket, programmers define their own loops with powerful macros. Indeed, these macros are so powerful that programmers make entire domain-specific languages as libraries. No tools, no Makefiles required.

    Racket is the first language to support higher-order software contracts and safe gradual typing. Programmers can easily deploy these tools to harden their software.

    Racket comes with support for major editors. The main bundle includes an innovative and extensible interactive development environment that has inspired other IDE projects.

    #lang typed/racket

    ;; Using higher-order occurrence typing
    (define-type SrN (U String Number))
    (: tog ((Listof SrN) -> String))
    (define (tog l)
    (apply string-append
    (filter string? l)))
    (tog (list 5 "hello "
    1/2 "world" (sqrt -1)))

    #lang scribble/base

    @; Generate a PDF or HTML document
    @(require (only-in racket ~a))
    @(define N 99)
    @title{Bottles: @italic{Abridged}}
    @(apply
    itemlist
    (for/list ([n (in-range N 0 -1)])
    @item{@(~a n) bottles.}))

    #lang datalog

    ancestor(A, B) :- parent(A, B).
    ancestor(A, B) :-
    parent(A, C), ancestor(C, B).
    parent(john, douglas).
    parent(bob, john).
    ancestor(A, B)?

    #lang racket

    (provide time-it)

    (require (for-syntax syntax/parse))

    (define-syntax (time-it stx)
    (syntax-parse stx
    [(_ task)
    #'(thunk-time-it (λ () task))]))

    (define (thunk-time-it task)
    (define before (cim))
    (define answer (task))
    (define delta (- (cim) before))
    (printf "time: ~a ms\n" delta)
    answer)

    (define cim current-inexact-milliseconds)

    Racket allows programmers to add new syntactic constructs in the same way that other languages permit the formulation of procedures, methods, or classes. All you need to do is formulate a simple rule that rewrites a custom syntax to a Racket expression or definition.

    Little macros can particularly help programmers with DRY where other features can’t. The example on the left above shows how to define a new syntax for measuring the time a task takes. The syntax avoids the repeated use of lambda. Note also how the macro is exported from this module as if it were an ordinary function.

    #lang racket/gui

    ;; let's play a guessing game

    (define frame (new frame% [label "Guess"]))

    (define secret (random 5))
    (define ((check i) btn evt)
    (define found? (if (= i secret) "Yes" "No"))
    (message-box "?" found?)
    (when (= i secret)
    (send frame show #false)))

    (for ([i (in-range 5)])
    (new button%
    [label (~a i)]
    [parent frame]
    [callback (check i)]))

    (send frame show #t)

    Racket comes with a comprehensive suite of libraries: a cross-platform GUI toolbox, a web server, and more. Thousands of additional packages are a single command away: 3D graphics, a bluetooth socket connector, color maps, data structures, educational software, games, a quantum-random number generator, scientific simulations, web script testing, and many more.

    Macros work with these tools. The example on the left above shows the implementation of a small number-guessing game. It is implemented in the GUI dialect of Racket, and demonstrates a number of language features.

    Big Macros

    Getting to know the full Racket macro system will feel liberating, empowering, dazzling—like a whole new level of enlightenment. Developers can easily create a collection of co-operating macros to implement algebraic pattern matching, simple event-handling, or a logic-constraint solver.

    While Racket is a functional language, it has offered a sub-language of classes and objects, mixins and traits, from the beginning. The macro-based implementation of a Java-like class system lives in a library and does not need any support from the core language. A Racket programmer can thus combine functional with object-oriented components as needed.

    #lang video Dependency Graph

    Some languages convey ideas more easily than others. And some programming languages convey solutions better than others. Therefore Racket is a language for making languages, so that a programmer can write every module in a well-suited language.

    Often an application domain comes with several languages. When you need a new language, you make it—on the fly. Open an IDE window; create a language right there, with just a few keystrokes; and run a module in this new language in a second IDE window. Making new languages really requires no setup, no project files, no external tools, no nothing.

    IDE Support

    Racket comes with its own IDE, DrRacket (née DrScheme), and it sports some unique features. For example, when a programmer mouses over an identifier, the IDE draws an arrow back to where it was defined.

    A programmer immediately benefits from DrRacket while using an alternative language, say Typed Racket. Racket macros, even complex ones and those used to make new languages, record and propagate a sufficient amount of source information for DrRacket to act as if it understood the features of the new language.

    Dots and Colon-Pipes, too!

    Racket programmers usually love parentheses, but they have empathy for those who need commas and braces. Hence, building languages with conventional surface syntax, like that of datalog, is almost as easy as building parenthetical languages.

    Racket’s ecosystem comes with parsing packages that allow developers to easily map any syntax to a parenthesized language, which is then compiled to ordinary Racket with the help of Racket’s macro system. Such a language can also exploit the hooks of the IDE framework, so that its programmers may take advantage of Racket’s IDE.

    eighth RacketCon, 2018
    Community

    Discourse and Discord
    These are the most active places for Racketeers.

    Slack (sign up), Reddit, and Mailing lists
    Racketeers are here, too!

    Mastodon, Twitter, and Blog
    Keep in touch.

    Wiki and YouTube
    Learn more from articles and talks.

    Team and Contributing
    Racket’s development benefits from a large distributed pool of contributors.

    Friendly Environment Policy
    Applies to all Racket venues.

    Software Freedom Conservancy
    Make a tax-deductible contribution to support our work.

    Racket School 2018
    Books

    The Racket Guide
    A detailed overview of the Racket Language.

    Realm of Racket
    Learn to program with Racket, one game at a time.

    Beautiful Racket
    Make your own programming languages with Racket.

    Server: Racket
    Develop a web application with Racket.

    All Racket Books

    Beautiful Racket
    Education

    The Racket Summer School
    a summer school for researchers, professionals, and (under)graduate students to the Racket philosophy of programming languages

    Program by Design (aka TeachScheme!)
    a curriculum and training program for high school teachers and college faculty

    Bootstrap
    a curriculum and training program for middle-school and high-school teachers

    The Four Amigos
    Swag

    Racket T-Shirts — the perfect way to meet friends, influence people, and stay warm.

    Racket Stickers — the indispensable accessory for laptops and textbooks.

    gear
    Thank you
  • To the NSF,
    DARPA,
    the Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE) at the US Department of Education,
    the Exxon Foundation,
    CORD, partners of the Academy of Information Technology,
    Microsoft,
    Mozilla,
    Google,
    and many individuals
    for their generous support over the years.