# Chicanery: subtle, opinionated improvements to R7RS Scheme While I was reading the [R7RS specification](https://standards.scheme.org/official/r7rs.pdf), I was a little annoyed by how broken up the standard library seemed to be. While the most egregious example is maybe `(scheme case-lambda)`, which exports ... only `case-lambda`, the other libraries like `(scheme write)` for `display`, `(scheme cxr)` for functions like `caddr` but not `cddr`, and the rest didn't really seem logical to me. Plus, in CHICKEN scheme, the one I usually use, `utf8` is an egg you need to install separately... To ameliorate these minor warts in what I otherwise consider to be an excellent language, `chicanery` was born. It's kind of like a prelude, I suppose? It imports all `r7rs` modules and re-exports their identifiers, and makes sure the implementation is Unicode-aware. It also includes a few extras ;) ## Chicanery extras I also thought it was strange that `map`, `for-each`, and `append` apply to lists only, while `vector-map` and `string-for-each`, exist, for example. `chicanery` prefixes the default `map`, `for-each`, and `append` functions with `list-`, and redefines those identifiers to functions that are generic over Scheme's base collection types (lists, strings, vectors, bytevectors where applicable). I didn't make the functions fully-generic to keep them efficient and because I don't know how to do that, but you can still use `vector-append` or `list-map` if you know what type you need and want speed. In a similar vein, I've also added generic functions `ref` and `copy` that dispatch to `string-ref`, `list-copy`, and the like. Other extras include - `(atom? x)` determines whether `x` is an atom (i.e., not a pair or null) - `(read-port)`, `(read-port port)` reads a port until hitting end-of-file (IDK why this isn't in R7RS!), in chunks of `read-port-chunk-size` - `(defined? x)` returns whether the symbol `x` is bound to a variable - `(displayed x)`, `(->string x)` returns `x` as a string (via `display`) - `(written x)` returns `x` as a string (via `write`) - `(print x ...)` displays `x ...` followed by a newline ## Supported Scheme implementations `chicanery` now supports multiple R7RS implementations! The full list can be found by running `make`, but here's what we have right now: - chicken - guile - gambit - chibi ## License This software is licensed under the GWL, v. 1.0. See COPYING for details.