Implementing HtDP Teachpacks, Libraries, and Customized Teaching Languages
DrRacket has two different mechanisms for making available additional functions and functionality to students using the teaching languages.
HtDP Teachpacks are added to a student’s program by clicking on the “Language” menu and selecting “add Teachpack”. Students can then install a new Teachpack by clicking “Add Teachpack to List” and choosing the Teachpack file from the filesystem.
HtDP Libraries are brought into the student’s program using a require statement.
Under the hood, HtDP Teachpacks and HtDP Libraries are implemented the same way, using normal Racket Modules.
choice of construct: The teaching languages limit the expressive power in comparison to plain Racket. One goal is to teach “design subject to constraints,” and the other one is to help restrict the set of explanations for student errors. With regard to the first, we consider it imperative that new teachpacks and libraries avoid features intended for upper-level students or professionals.
error messages: The error messages from the teaching languages go to great length to never confront students messages that uses vocabulary or phrases outside of the scope of the chosen level. While teachpacks and libraries can be used at all levels, they should ideally restrict the vocabulary in error message to the lowest level language in which they are to be used.
This manual describes library support for authors of HtDP Teachpacks, libraries, and customized teaching languages. Use the HtDP error reporting functions to create error messages that integrate smoothly with those of the teaching languages. Before composing new error messages, we recommend you read the error message composition guidelines that informed the design of the error messages of DrRacket’s teaching languages.
1 Error Message Composition Guidelines
This section lists some guidelines for writing good error messages for novices, as informed by our research. Please follow these guidelines when you write code that is intended for beginners, including libraries and teachpacks. It ensures that error messages from your code fits messages from the student languages and from other teachpacks.
1.1 General Guidelines
Frustrated students will peer at the error message for clues on how to proceed. Avoid offering hints, and avoid proposing any specific modification. Students will follow well-meaning-but-wrong advice uncritically, if only because they have no reason to doubt the authoritative voice of the tool.
Be concise and clear. Students give up reading error messages if the text is too long, uses obscure words, or employs difficult grammar.
1.2 Message Structure and Form
Start the message with the name of the construct whose constraint is being violated, followed by a colon.
State the constraint that was violated (“expected a...”), then contrast with what was found. For example, “this function expects two arguments, but found only one”. If needed, explain how what was found fails to satisfy the constraint. Write somewhat anthropomorphically with an objective voice that is neither friendly nor antagonistic.
If an expression contains multiple errors, report the leftmost error first. E.g., the error in (define 1 2 3) is “expected the variable name, but found a number”, not “expected 2 parts after define, but found 3”. Before raising an error about a sub-part of a macro, call syntax-local-expand-expression on sub-expressions to its left, so that such errors are shown first.
State the number of parts instead of saying “found too many parts”. Write the code necessary to make plurals agree.
1.3 Words For Describing Code
Use only the following vocabulary words to describe code:
function | variable | argument | function body |
expression | part | clause | top level |
structure name | type name | field name | binding |
Use binding for the square-braced pair in a let and similar binding forms.
Use ‘argument’ for actual arguments and ‘variable’ for formal arguments in the header and body of a definition.
Use ‘part’ when speaking about an s-expression that is not an expression, either because it is malformed, because it occurs in a non-expression position, or because it is a valid piece of syntax for a macro invocation. A well-formed and well-placed call to a function, primitive, or macro is not a ‘part’, it is an ‘expression’.
1.4 Words For Describing Runtime Behavior
Use the following vocabulary words to describe how code runs:
When specifying a function’s behavior, say “the function takes ... and produces ...”
When describing a contract violation, say “the function expects ... but received ...”
As much as possible, identify expressions and the value they evaluate to, e.g. “the value of (f x) is 5”. If it is necessary to mention evaluation order, such as when the context discusses mutable state, say that the expression “evaluates to” a value. Function calls are a special case of expression. Prefer “the function call produces ...” to “the function call evaluates to ...”, except when trying to draw attention to the evaluation of the arguments.
set! and set-structure-name-field-name! ‘mutate’ variables and structure instances, respectively. Avoid using the verb ‘sets’ when discussing mutation, and reserve the verbs ‘changes’ and ‘updates’ for functional updates.
1.5 Prohibited Words
These guidelines use few terms intentionally, emphasizing commonality among concepts rather than technical precision (which most students do not appreciate anyway).
Instead of | Use |
procedure, primitive name, primitive operator, predicate, selector, constructor | “function”” |
s-expression | “expression” |
identifier | “argument” or “variable”, depending on the use in the program |
defined name | “function” or “variable” |
sequence | “at least one (in parentheses)” |
function header | “after define”, “after the name”, “after the first argument”, ... |
keyword | mention the construct directly by name, such as “expected a variable but found a cond” |
built-in | Nothing — |
macro | Nothing — |
1.6 General Vocabulary Guidelines
Avoid modifiers that are not necessary to disambiguate. Write ‘variable’ instead of ‘local variable’, ‘defined variable’, or ‘input variable’. Write ‘clause’ instead of ‘question-answer clause’. If they appear necessary for disambiguation, try to find some other way to achieve this (and drop the modifier).
When introducing macros with sub-parts, reuse existing vocabulary words, such as ‘clause’ or ‘binding’ (if appropriate), or just ‘part’, instead of defining new terms.
Use ‘name’ only when describing the syntax of a definition form. For example, the define form in BSL should say “expected at least one variable after the function name”. Outside of the definition form, simply use the word ‘function’ rather than distinguish between (1) a function, (2) the variable that binds the function, and (3) the name of that variable.
[Rationale: Students learn this distinction when they learn about lambda. The first is the lambda implicit in the definition, the second is the variable introduced by the definition that can appear as the first argument to set!, the third is the particular sequence of letters. But BSL should avoid this complexity, and ASL’s error messages should maintain consistency with BSL.]
Avoid introducing technical vocabulary, even if well-known to a mathematician.
1.7 Punctuation
Do not use any punctuation beyond those of the normal English language. Do not write <> around type names, and do not write quotes around keywords.
1.8 Supporting Research
Mind Your Language: On Novices’ Interactions with Error Messages
This paper reports on a series of studies that explore beginning students’ interactions with the vocabulary and source-expression highlighting in DrRacket. Our findings demonstrate that the error message DrRacket’s old error messages significantly failed to convey information accurately to students.
Measuring the Effectiveness of Error Messages Designed for Novice Programmers
This paper presents a fine-grained grading rubric for evaluating the performance of individual error messages. We applied the rubric to a course worth of student work, which allowed us to characterize some ways error messages fail.
2 Error Reporting Functions
(require htdp/error) | package: htdp-lib |
To provide uniform error messages from teachpacks, this module provides several functions:
procedure
name : (or/c symbol? string?) chk : boolean? expected : any/c position : (or/c (and/c positive? integer?) string?) given : any/c
procedure
(check-arity name [arg#] args) → void?
name : (or/c symbol? string?) arg# : (or/c (and/c positive? integer?) string?) = ? args : list?
procedure
(check-proc name proc expected arg# arg-err) → void?
name : (or/c symbol? string?) proc : any/c expected : natural? arg# : (or/c (and/c positive? integer?) string?) arg-err : string?
procedure
(check-result name pred? kind returned ...+) → void?
name : (or/c symbol? string?) pred? : (-> any/c boolean?) kind : (or/c symbol? string?) returned : any/c
procedure
(check-list-list name chk pred? given) → void?
name : (or/c symbol? string?) chk : (or/c string? false/c) pred? : any/c given : any/c
procedure
(check-color name arg# given) → void?
name : (or/c symbol? string?) arg# : natural? given : any/c
procedure
(check-fun-res f pred? type) → void?
f : procedure? pred? : (-> any/c boolean?) type : (or/c symbol? string?)
procedure
(check-dependencies name chk fmt arg ...) → void?
name : (or/c symbol? string?) chk : boolean? fmt : format-string? arg : any/c
procedure
(number->ord n) → string?
n : natural?
MF: These library and its uses needs to be cleaned up.
3 Testing
(require htdp/testing) | package: htdp-lib |
The library re-exports the following identifiers from test-engine/racket-tests
procedure
procedure
procedure
(display-results) → void?
procedure
(error-handler) → void?
procedure
(exn:fail:wish) → void?
procedure
(get-test-engine) → void?
procedure
(reset-tests) → void?
procedure
procedure
procedure
procedure
(generate-report) → void?
4 HtDP Languages as Libraries
4.1 HtDP Beginning Student
(require lang/htdp-beginner) | package: htdp-lib |
The lang/htdp-beginner module provides the Beginning Student Language; see Beginning Student.
4.2 HtDP Beginning Student with Abbreviations
(require lang/htdp-beginner-abbr) | package: htdp-lib |
The lang/htdp-beginner-abbr module provides the Beginning Student with Abbreviations language; see Beginning Student with List Abbreviations.
4.3 HtDP Intermediate Student
(require lang/htdp-intermediate) | package: htdp-lib |
The lang/htdp-intermediate module provides the Intermediate Student language; see Intermediate Student.
4.4 HtDP Intermediate Student with Lambda
(require lang/htdp-intermediate-lambda) | |
package: htdp-lib |
The lang/htdp-intermediate-lambda module provides the Intermediate Student with Lambda language; see Intermediate Student with Lambda.
4.5 HtDP Advanced Student
(require lang/htdp-advanced) | package: htdp-lib |
The lang/htdp-advanced module provides the Advanced Student language; see Advanced Student.
4.6 Pretty Big Text (Legacy Language)
(require lang/plt-pretty-big-text) | package: htdp-lib |
The lang/plt-pretty-big-text module is similar to the HtDP Advanced Student language, but with more of Racket’s libraries in legacy form. It provides the bindings of mzscheme, mzlib/etc, mzlib/file, mzlib/list, mzlib/class, mzlib/unit, mzlib/include, mzlib/defmacro, mzlib/pretty, mzlib/string, mzlib/thread, mzlib/math, mzlib/match, mzlib/shared, and lang/posn.
4.7 Pretty Big (Legacy Language)
(require lang/plt-pretty-big) | package: htdp-lib |
The lang/plt-pretty-big module extends lang/plt-pretty-big-text with racket/gui/base and lang/imageeq. This language corresponds to the Pretty Big legacy language in DrRacket.
4.8 posns in HtDP Languages
(require lang/posn) | package: htdp-lib |
4.9 Image Equality in HtDP Languages
(require lang/imageeq) | package: htdp-lib |
procedure
(image=? i1 i2) → boolean?
i1 : (is-a?/c image-snip%) i2 : (is-a?/c image-snip%)
4.10 Primitives in HtDP Beginner
(require lang/prim) | package: htdp-lib |
The lang/prim module several syntactic forms for use by the implementors of teachpacks, when the teachpack is to be used with the Beginner Student Language. In Beginner Student, primitive names (for built-in procedures) are distinguished from other types of expressions, so that they can be syntactically restricted to application positions.
syntax
(define-primitive id proc-id)
syntax
(provide-primitive id)
syntax
(provide-primitives id ...)
syntax
(define-higher-order-primitive id proc-id (arg ...))
For each non-procedure argument, the corresponding arg should be an underscore. For each procedure argument, the corresponding arg should be the usual name of the procedure.
Examples: |
|
syntax
(provide-higher-order-primitive id (arg ...))
syntax
(first-order->higher-order expression)
This form is mainly useful for implementing syntactic forms that, like the application of a higher-order primitive, allow first-order bindings to be used in an expression position.
5 Color and Alpha Color Structs
(require htdp/color-structs) | package: htdp-lib |
struct
(struct color (red green blue) #:extra-constructor-name make-color) red : any/c green : any/c blue : any/c
struct
(struct alpha-color (alpha red green blue) #:extra-constructor-name make-alpha-color) alpha : any/c red : any/c green : any/c blue : any/c