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= Bus Scheme
    by Phil Hagelberg (c) 2007 - 2008
    http://bus-scheme.rubyforge.org

== Description

Bus Scheme is a Scheme written in Ruby, but implemented on the bus!
Every programmer must implement Scheme as a rite of passage; this is
mine. Note that at least half of the implementation of Bus Scheme must
be written while on a bus. Documentation, tests, and administrivia may
be accomplished elsewhere, but the majority of actual implementation
code is strictly bus-driven. Bus Scheme is primarily a toy; using it
for anything serious is (right now) ill-advised.

Bus Scheme aims for general Scheme usefulness optimized for learning
and fun. It's loosely targeting R5RS, but varies in huge ways. (For
the purposes of this project we pretend that R6RS never happened.) See
the file R5RS.diff for ways in which Bus Scheme differs from the
standard, both things that are yet unimplemented and things that are
intentionally different.

== Usage

$ bus # drop into the REPL

$ bus -e "(do some stuff)"

$ bus foo.scm # load a file

== Tutorial

See http://technomancy.us/104 for a "Getting Started" tutorial.

== Contributing

If you're looking for stuff to do, try "rake todo"

Patches are welcome especially if they were written while riding a
bus. If your daily commute does not involve a bus but you want to
submit a patch, we may be able to work something out regarding code
written on trains, ferries, or perhaps even carpool lanes.

Join the mailing list to ask questions and discuss:
http://rubyforge.org/mail/?group_id=5094

== What makes Bus Scheme different?

Well, for starters it's implemented on the bus. No other Scheme
implementation can claim this. Here are a few other things that set
Bus Scheme apart:

=== Flexible calling syntax

Taking a hint from Arc, Bus Scheme allows you to use the notation
(mylist n) to access the nth place of the mylist list instead of (nth
mylist n) or the (myhash key) notation to access the slot in myhash
corresponding to the value of key instead of (gethash myhash key). 
TODO: This notation is flexible, and other data types may have
their own "call behaviour" specified.

=== Web functionality

Planned: Web and RESTful application development are part of the
package. Bus Scheme uses the Rack library to allow scheme programs to
serve web applications. Representations of data can be easily
translated between s-expressions, HTML, and JSON.

=== Written in a high-level language

Bus Scheme is written in Ruby, which means anyone with experience in
high-level dynamic languages (like, oh, I don't know... Scheme?)
should be right at home poking around at the implementation. Using
Ruby allows the implementation code to remain compact and concise. Bus
Scheme should run on Ruby 1.8, Ruby 1.9, Rubinius, and JRuby at
least. Bus Scheme also allows you to drop into Ruby when that's
convenient. TODO: allow real inline Ruby blocks instead of access via
a function call.

=== Test-Driven

Bus Scheme is written in an entirely test-driven manner. As much as
possible, it tries to keep its tests written in Scheme itself, so it
includes a fairly comprehensive testing suite and encourages programs
to be written test-first.

== Install

* sudo gem install bus-scheme

For the source:

* git clone git://github.com/technomancy/bus-scheme.git

== Todo

Bus Scheme is currently missing pieces of functionality:

=== Parser
* multiline strings
* regular expressions

=== General
* filter stacktrace
* continuations
* macros

Failing tests for some of these are already included (commented out,
mostly) in the relevant test files.

=== Long Term (post 1.0)
* web functions (defresource and friends)
* (lambda (arg1 arg2 . args) body) for rest args
* string interpolation
* escape sequences in strings
* Ruby blocks inline?
* XML literals?
* optimize tail call recursion
* compile to Rubinius bytecode
* custom call behaviour
* parse non-decimal base numbers
* parse rationals, scientific, complex, and polar complex numbers

== Requirements

Bus Scheme should run on (at least) Ruby 1.8, Ruby 1.9, Rubinius,
JRuby. Any support for Windows is entirely accidental.

== Bonus Fact

I haven't actually used a real Scheme yet. Everything I know about it
I've gathered from reading The Little Schemer, watching the Structure
and Interpretation of Computer Programs videos, and reading lots about
Common Lisp and Emacs Lisp. If there are huge gaping flaws in the
implementation, this is likely to be why.

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