1.3 The Reader
Racket’s reader is a recursive-descent parser that can be configured through a readtable and various other parameters. This section describes the reader’s parsing when using the default readtable.
Reading from a stream produces one datum. If the result datum is a compound value, then reading the datum typically requires the reader to call itself recursively to read the component data.
The reader can be invoked in either of two modes: read mode, or read-syntax mode. In read-syntax mode, the result is always a syntax object that includes source-location and (initially empty) lexical information wrapped around the sort of datum that read mode would produce. In the case of pairs, vectors, and boxes, the content is also wrapped recursively as a syntax object. Unless specified otherwise, this section describes the reader’s behavior in read mode, and read-syntax mode does the same modulo wrapping of the final result.
Reading is defined in terms of Unicode characters; see Ports for information on how a byte stream is converted to a character stream.
Symbols, keywords, strings, byte strings, regexps, characters, and numbers produced by the reader in read-syntax mode are interned, which means that such values in the result of read-syntax are always eq? when they are equal? (whether from the same call or different calls to read-syntax). Symbols and keywords are interned in both read and read-syntax mode. When a quoted value is in compiled code that written and then read back in (see Printing Compiled Code), only strings and byte strings are interned when reading the code. Sending an interned value across a place channel does not necessarily produce an interned value at the receiving place. See also datum-intern-literal and datum->syntax.
Note that interned values are only weakly held by the reader’s internal table, so they may be garbage collected if they are no longer otherwise reachable. This weakness can never affect the result of an eq?, eqv?, or equal? test, but an interned value may disappear when placed into a weak box (see Weak Boxes), used as the key in a weak hash table (see Hash Tables), or used as an ephemeron key (see Ephemerons).
1.3.1 Delimiters and Dispatch
Along with whitespace and a BOM character, the following characters are delimiters:
( ) [ ] { } " , ' ` ;
A delimited sequence that starts with any other character is typically parsed as either a symbol, number, or extflonum, but a few non-delimiter characters play special roles:
# has a special meaning as an initial character in a delimited sequence; its meaning depends on the characters that follow; see below.
| starts a subsequence of characters to be included verbatim in the delimited sequence (i.e., they are never treated as delimiters, and they are not case-folded when case-insensitivity is enabled); the subsequence is terminated by another |, and neither the initial nor terminating | is part of the subsequence.
\ outside of a | pair causes the following character to be included verbatim in a delimited sequence.
More precisely, after skipping whitespace and #\uFEFF BOM characters, the reader dispatches based on the next character or characters in the input stream as follows:
| ( |
| starts a pair or list; see Reading Pairs and Lists |
| [ |
| starts a pair or list; see Reading Pairs and Lists |
| { |
| starts a pair or list; see Reading Pairs and Lists |
| ) |
| matches ( or raises exn:fail:read |
| ] |
| matches [ or raises exn:fail:read |
| } |
| matches { or raises exn:fail:read |
| " |
| starts a string; see Reading Strings |
| ' |
| starts a quote; see Reading Quotes |
| ` |
| starts a quasiquote; see Reading Quotes |
| , |
| starts a [splicing] unquote; see Reading Quotes |
| ; |
| starts a line comment; see Reading Comments |
| #t or #T |
| true; see Reading Booleans |
| #f or #F |
| false; see Reading Booleans |
| #( |
| starts a vector; see Reading Vectors |
| #[ |
| starts a vector; see Reading Vectors |
| #{ |
| starts a vector; see Reading Vectors |
| #fl( or #Fl( |
| starts a flvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #fl[ or #Fl[ |
| starts a flvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #fl{ or #Fl{ |
| starts a flvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #fx( or #Fx( |
| starts a fxvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #fx[ or #Fx[ |
| starts a fxvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #fx{ or #Fx{ |
| starts a fxvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #s( |
| starts a structure literal; see Reading Structures |
| #s[ |
| starts a structure literal; see Reading Structures |
| #s{ |
| starts a structure literal; see Reading Structures |
| #\ |
| starts a character; see Reading Characters |
| #" |
| starts a byte string; see Reading Strings |
| #% |
| starts a symbol; see Reading Symbols |
| #: |
| starts a keyword; see Reading Keywords |
| #& |
| starts a box; see Reading Boxes |
| #| |
| starts a block comment; see Reading Comments |
| #; |
| starts an S-expression comment; see Reading Comments |
| #' |
| starts a syntax quote; see Reading Quotes |
| #! |
| starts a line comment; see Reading Comments |
| #!/ |
| starts a line comment; see Reading Comments |
| #! |
| may start a reader extension; see Reading via an Extension |
| #` |
| starts a syntax quasiquote; see Reading Quotes |
| #, |
| starts a syntax [splicing] unquote; see Reading Quotes |
| #~ |
| starts compiled code; see Printing Compiled Code |
| #i or #I |
| starts a number; see Reading Numbers |
| #e or #E |
| starts a number; see Reading Numbers |
| #x or #X |
| starts a number or extflonum; see Reading Numbers |
| #o or #O |
| starts a number or extflonum; see Reading Numbers |
| #d or #D |
| starts a number or extflonum; see Reading Numbers |
| #b or #B |
| starts a number or extflonum; see Reading Numbers |
| #<< |
| starts a string; see Reading Strings |
| #rx |
| starts a regular expression; see Reading Regular Expressions |
| #px |
| starts a regular expression; see Reading Regular Expressions |
| #ci, #cI, #Ci, or #CI |
| switches case sensitivity; see Reading Symbols |
| #cs, #cS, #Cs, or #CS |
| switches case sensitivity; see Reading Symbols |
| #hash |
| starts a hash table; see Reading Hash Tables |
| #reader |
| starts a reader extension use; see Reading via an Extension |
| #lang |
| starts a reader extension use; see Reading via an Extension |
| #‹digit10›+( |
| starts a vector; see Reading Vectors |
| #‹digit10›+[ |
| starts a vector; see Reading Vectors |
| #‹digit10›+{ |
| starts a vector; see Reading Vectors |
| #fl‹digit10›+( |
| starts a flvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #fl‹digit10›+[ |
| starts a flvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #fl‹digit10›+{ |
| starts a flvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #Fl‹digit10›+( |
| starts a flvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #Fl‹digit10›+[ |
| starts a flvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #Fl‹digit10›+{ |
| starts a flvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #fx‹digit10›+( |
| starts a fxvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #fx‹digit10›+[ |
| starts a fxvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #fx‹digit10›+{ |
| starts a fxvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #Fx‹digit10›+( |
| starts a fxvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #Fx‹digit10›+[ |
| starts a fxvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #Fx‹digit10›+{ |
| starts a fxvector; see Reading Vectors |
| #‹digit10›{1,8}= |
| binds a graph tag; see Reading Graph Structure |
| #‹digit10›{1,8}# |
| uses a graph tag; see Reading Graph Structure |
| otherwise |
| starts a symbol; see Reading Symbols |
Changed in version 7.8.0.9 of package base: Changed treatment of the BOM character so that it is treated like whitespace in the same places that comments are allowed.
1.3.2 Reading Symbols
Symbols in The Racket Guide introduces the syntax of symbols.
A sequence that does not start with a delimiter or # is parsed as either a symbol, a number (see Reading Numbers), or a extflonum (see Reading Extflonums), except that . by itself is never parsed as a symbol or number (unless the read-accept-dot parameter is set to #f). A successful number or extflonum parse takes precedence over a symbol parse. A #% also starts a symbol. The resulting symbol is interned. See the start of Delimiters and Dispatch for information about | and \ in parsing symbols.
When the read-case-sensitive parameter is set to #f, characters in the sequence that are not quoted by | or \ are first case-normalized. If the reader encounters #ci, #CI, #Ci, or #cI, then it recursively reads the following datum in case-insensitive mode. If the reader encounters #cs, #CS, #Cs, or #cS, then it recursively reads the following datum in case-sensitive mode.
Examples: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
1.3.3 Reading Numbers
Numbers in The Racket Guide introduces the syntax of numbers.
A sequence that does not start with a delimiter is parsed as a number when it matches the following grammar case-insensitively for ‹number10› (decimal), where n is a meta-meta-variable in the grammar. The resulting number is interned in read-syntax mode.
A number is optionally prefixed by an exactness specifier, #e (exact) or #i (inexact), which specifies its parsing as an exact or inexact number; see Numbers for information on number exactness. As the non-terminal names suggest, a number that has no exactness specifier and matches only ‹inexact-numbern› is normally parsed as an inexact number, otherwise it is parsed as an exact number. If the read-decimal-as-inexact parameter is set to #f, then all numbers without an exactness specifier are instead parsed as exact.
If the reader encounters #b (binary), #o (octal), #d (decimal), or #x (hexadecimal), it must be followed by a sequence that is terminated by a delimiter or end-of-file, and that is either an extflonum (see Reading Extflonums) or matches the ‹general-number2›, ‹general-number8›, ‹general-number10›, or ‹general-number16› grammar, respectively.
A #e or #i followed immediately by #b, #o, #d, or #x is treated the same as the reverse order: #b, #o, #d, or #x followed by #e or #i.
An ‹exponent-markn› in an inexact number serves both to specify an exponent and to specify a numerical precision. If single-flonums are supported (see Numbers) and the read-single-flonum parameter is set to #t, the marks f and s specify single-flonums. If read-single-flonum is set to #f, or with any other mark, a double-precision flonum is produced. If single-flonums are not supported and read-single-flonum is set to #t, then the exn:fail:unsupported exception is raised when a single-flonum would otherwise be produced. Special infinity and not-a-number flonums and single-flonums are distinct; specials with the .0 suffix, like +nan.0, are double-precision flonums, while specials with the .f suffix, like +nan.f, are single-flonums if enabled though read-single-flonum.
A # in an ‹inexactn› number is the same as 0, but # can be used to suggest that the digit’s actual value is unknown.
All letters in a number representation are parsed case-insensitively, independent of the read-case-sensitive parameter. For example, #I#D+InF.F+3I is parsed the same as #i#d+inf.f+3i. In the grammar below, each literal lowercase letter stands for both itself and its uppercase form.
| ‹numbern› | ::= | ‹exactn› | ‹inexactn› |
| ‹exactn› | ::= | ‹exact-rationaln› | ‹exact-complexn› |
| ‹exact-rationaln› | ::= | [‹sign›] ‹unsigned-rationaln› |
| ‹unsigned-rationaln› | ::= | ‹unsigned-integern› |
|
| | | ‹unsigned-integern› / ‹unsigned-integern› |
| ‹exact-integern› | ::= | [‹sign›] ‹unsigned-integern› |
| ‹unsigned-integern› | ::= | ‹digitn›+ |
| ‹exact-complexn› | ::= | [‹exact-rationaln›] ‹sign› [‹unsigned-rationaln›] i |
| ‹inexactn› | ::= | ‹inexact-realn› | ‹inexact-complexn› |
| ‹inexact-realn› | ::= | [‹sign›] ‹inexact-normaln› |
|
| | | ‹sign› ‹inexact-specialn› |
| ‹inexact-unsignedn› | ::= | ‹inexact-normaln› | ‹inexact-specialn› |
| ‹inexact-normaln› | ::= | ‹inexact-simplen› [‹exp-markn› ‹exact-integern›] |
| ‹inexact-simplen› | ::= | ‹digits#n› [.] #* |
|
| | | [‹unsigned-integern›] . ‹digits#n› |
|
| | | ‹digits#n› / ‹digits#n› |
| ‹inexact-specialn› | ::= | inf.0 | nan.0 | inf.f | nan.f |
| ‹digits#n› | ::= | ‹digitn›+ #* |
| ‹inexact-complexn› | ::= | [‹inexact-realn›] ‹sign› [‹inexact-unsignedn›] i |
|
| | | ‹inexact-realn› @ ‹inexact-realn› |
| ‹sign› | ::= | + | - |
| ‹digit16› | ::= | ‹digit10› | a | b | c | d | e | f |
| ‹digit10› | ::= | ‹digit8› | 8 | 9 |
| ‹digit8› | ::= | ‹digit2› | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
| ‹digit2› | ::= | 0 | 1 |
| ‹exp-mark16› | ::= | s | l |
| ‹exp-mark10› | ::= | ‹exp-mark16› | d | e | f |
| ‹exp-mark8› | ::= | ‹exp-mark10› |
| ‹exp-mark2› | ::= | ‹exp-mark10› |
| ‹general-numbern› | ::= | [‹exactness›] ‹numbern› |
| ‹exactness› | ::= | #e | #i |
Examples: | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
1.3.4 Reading Extflonums
An extflonum has the same syntax as an ‹inexact-realn› that includes an ‹exp-markn›, but with t or T in place of the ‹exp-markn›. In addition, +inf.t, -inf.t, +nan.t, -nan.t are extflonums. A #b (binary), #o (octal), #d (decimal), or #x (hexadecimal) radix specification can prefix an extflonum, but #i or #e cannot, and a extflonum cannot be used to form a complex number. The read-decimal-as-inexact parameter has no effect on extflonum reading.
1.3.5 Reading Booleans
A #true, #t, #T followed by a delimiter is the input syntax for the boolean constant “true,” and #false, #f, or #F followed by a delimiter is the complete input syntax for the boolean constant “false.”
1.3.6 Reading Pairs and Lists
When the reader encounters a (, [, or {, it starts parsing a pair or list; see Pairs and Lists for information on pairs and lists.
To parse the pair or list, the reader recursively reads data until a matching ), ], or } (respectively) is found, and it specially handles a . surrounded by delimiters. Pairs (), [], and {} are treated the same way, so the remainder of this section simply uses “parentheses” to mean any of these pair.
If the reader finds no delimited . among the elements between parentheses, then it produces a list containing the results of the recursive reads.
If the reader finds two data between the matching parentheses that are separated by a delimited ., then it creates a pair. More generally, if it finds two or more data where the last datum is preceded by a delimited ., then it constructs nested pairs: the next-to-last element is paired with the last, then the third-to-last datum is paired with that pair, and so on.
If the reader finds three or more data between the matching parentheses, and if a pair of delimited .s surrounds any other than the first and last elements, the result is a list containing the element surrounded by .s as the first element, followed by the others in the read order. This convention supports a kind of infix notation at the reader level.
In read-syntax mode, the recursive reads for the pair/list elements are themselves in read-syntax mode, so that the result is a list or pair of syntax objects that is itself wrapped as a syntax object. If the reader constructs nested pairs because the input included a single delimited ., then only the innermost pair and outermost pair are wrapped as syntax objects.
Whether wrapping a pair or list, if the pair or list was formed with [ and ], then a 'paren-shape property is attached to the result with the value #\[. If the read-square-bracket-with-tag parameter is set to #t, then the resulting pair or list is wrapped by the equivalent of (cons '#%brackets pair-or-list).
Similarly, if the list or pair was formed with { and }, then a 'paren-shape property is attached to the result with the value #\{. If the read-curly-brace-with-tag parameter is set to #t, then the resulting pair or list is wrapped by the equivalent of (cons '#%braces pair-or-list).
If a delimited . appears in any other configuration, then the exn:fail:read exception is raised. Similarly, if the reader encounters a ), ], or } that does not end a list being parsed, then the exn:fail:read exception is raised.
Examples: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
If the read-square-bracket-as-paren and read-square-bracket-with-tag parameters are set to #f, then when the reader encounters [ and ], the exn:fail:read exception is raised. Similarly, if the read-curly-brace-as-paren and read-curly-brace-with-tag parameters are set to #f, then when the reader encounters { and }, the exn:fail:read exception is raised.
If the read-accept-dot parameter is set to #f, then a delimited . triggers an exn:fail:read exception. If the read-accept-infix-dot parameter is set to #f, then multiple delimited .s trigger an exn:fail:read exception, instead of the infix conversion.
1.3.7 Reading Strings
Strings (Unicode) in The Racket Guide introduces the syntax of strings.
When the reader encounters ", it begins parsing characters to form a string. The string continues until it is terminated by another " (that is not escaped by \). The resulting string is interned in read-syntax mode.
Within a string sequence, the following escape sequences are recognized:
\\: backslash (i.e., the second is not an escaping backslash)
\‹digit8›{1,3}: Unicode for the octal number specified by digit8{1,3} (i.e., 1 to 3 ‹digit8›s), where each ‹digit8› is 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, or 7. A longer form takes precedence over a shorter form, and the resulting octal number must be between 0 and 255 decimal, otherwise the exn:fail:read exception is raised.
\x‹digit16›{1,2}: Unicode for the hexadecimal number specified by ‹digit16›{1,2}, where each ‹digit16› is 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, a, b, c, d, e, or f (case-insensitive). The longer form takes precedence over the shorter form.
\u‹digit16›{1,4}: like \x, but with up to four hexadecimal digits (longer sequences take precedence). The resulting hexadecimal number must be a valid argument to integer->char, otherwise the exn:fail:read exception is raised—
unless the encoding continues with another \u to form a surrogate-style encoding. \u‹digit16›{4,4}\u‹digit16›{4,4}: like \u, but for two hexadecimal numbers, where the first is in the range #xD800 to #xDBFF and the second is in the range #xDC00 to #xDFFF; the resulting character is the one represented by the numbers as a UTF-16 surrogate pair.
\U‹digit16›{1,8}: like \x, but with up to eight hexadecimal digits (longer sequences take precedence). The resulting hexadecimal number must be a valid argument to integer->char, otherwise the exn:fail:read exception is raised.
\‹newline›: elided, where ‹newline› is either a linefeed, carriage return, or carriage return–linefeed combination. This convention allows single-line strings to span multiple lines in the source.
If the reader encounters any other use of a backslash in a string constant, the exn:fail:read exception is raised.
Bytes and Byte Strings in The Racket Guide introduces the syntax of byte strings.
A string constant preceded by # is parsed as a byte string. (That is, #" starts a byte-string literal.) See Byte Strings for information on byte strings. The resulting byte string is interned in read-syntax mode. Byte-string constants support the same escape sequences as character strings, except \u and \U. Otherwise, each character within the byte-string quotes must have a Unicode code-point number in the range 0 to 255, which is used as the corresponding byte’s value; if a character is not in that range, the exn:fail:read exception is raised.
When the reader encounters #<<, it starts parsing a here string. The characters following #<< until a newline character define a terminator for the string. The content of the string includes all characters between the #<< line and a line whose only content is the specified terminator. More precisely, the content of the string starts after a newline following #<<, and it ends before a newline that is followed by the terminator, where the terminator is itself followed by either a newline or end-of-file. No escape sequences are recognized between the starting and terminating lines; all characters are included in the string (and terminator) literally. A return character is not treated as a line separator in this context. If no characters appear between #<< and a newline or end-of-file, or if an end-of-file is encountered before a terminating line, the exn:fail:read exception is raised.
Examples: | |||||||||||||||
|
1.3.8 Reading Quotes
When the reader encounters ', it recursively reads one datum and forms a new list containing the symbol 'quote and the following datum. This convention is mainly useful for reading Racket code, where 's can be used as a shorthand for (quote s).
Several other sequences are recognized and transformed in a similar way. Longer prefixes take precedence over short ones:
| ' | adds | |
| adds | ||
| adds | ||
| adds | ||
| adds | ||
| adds | ||
| adds | ||
| adds |
Examples: | ||||||
|
The `, ,, and ,@ forms are disabled when the read-accept-quasiquote parameter is set to #f, in which case the exn:fail:read exception is raised instead.
1.3.9 Reading Comments
A ; starts a line comment. When the reader encounters ;, it skips past all characters until the next linefeed (ASCII 10), carriage return (ASCII 13), next-line (Unicode 133), line-separator (Unicode 8232), or paragraph-separator (Unicode 8233) character.
A #| starts a nestable block comment. When the reader encounters #|, it skips past all characters until a closing |#. Pairs of matching #| and |# can be nested.
A #; starts an S-expression comment. When the reader encounters #;, it recursively reads one datum, and then discards it (continuing on to the next datum for the read result).
A #! (which is #! followed by a space) or #!/ starts a line comment that can be continued to the next line by ending a line with \. This form of comment normally appears at the beginning of a Unix script file.
Examples: | ||||||||||||||||||
|
1.3.10 Reading Vectors
When the reader encounters a #(, #[, or #{, it starts parsing a vector; see Vectors for information on vectors. A #fl in place of # starts an flvector, but is not allowed in read-syntax mode; see Flonum Vectors for information on flvectors. A #fx in place of # starts an fxvector, but is not allowed in read-syntax mode; see Fixnum Vectors for information on fxvectors. The #[, #{, #fl[, #fl{, #fx[, and #fx{ forms can be disabled through the read-square-bracket-as-paren and read-curly-brace-as-paren parameters.
The elements of the vector are recursively read until a matching ), ], or } is found, just as for lists (see Reading Pairs and Lists). A delimited . is not allowed among the vector elements. In the case of flvectors, the recursive read for element is implicitly prefixed with #i and must produce a flonum. In the case of fxvectors, the recursive read for element is implicitly prefixed with #e and must produce a fixnum.
An optional vector length can be specified between #, #fl, #fx and (, [, or {. The size is specified using a sequence of decimal digits, and the number of elements provided for the vector must be no more than the specified size. If fewer elements are provided, the last provided element is used for the remaining vector slots; if no elements are provided, then 0 is used for all slots.
In read-syntax mode, each recursive read for vector elements is also in read-syntax mode, so that the wrapped vector’s elements are also wrapped as syntax objects, and the vector is immutable.
Examples: | |||||||||
|
1.3.11 Reading Structures
When the reader encounters a #s(, #s[, or #s{, it starts parsing an instance of a prefab structure type; see Structures for information on structure types. The #s[ and #s{ forms can be disabled through the read-square-bracket-as-paren and read-curly-brace-as-paren parameters.
The elements of the structure are recursively read until a matching ), ], or } is found, just as for lists (see Reading Pairs and Lists). A single delimited . is not allowed among the elements, but two .s can be used as in a list for an infix conversion.
The first element is used as the structure descriptor, and it must have the form (when quoted) of a possible argument to make-prefab-struct; in the simplest case, it can be a symbol. The remaining elements correspond to field values within the structure.
In read-syntax mode, the structure type must not have any mutable fields. The structure’s elements are read in read-syntax mode, so that the wrapped structure’s elements are also wrapped as syntax objects.
If the first structure element is not a valid prefab structure type key, or if the number of provided fields is inconsistent with the indicated prefab structure type, the exn:fail:read exception is raised.
1.3.12 Reading Hash Tables
A #hash starts an immutable hash-table constant with key matching based on equal?. The characters after hash must parse as a list of pairs (see Reading Pairs and Lists) with a specific use of delimited .: it must appear between the elements of each pair in the list and nowhere in the sequence of list elements. The first element of each pair is used as the key for a table entry, and the second element of each pair is the associated value.
A #hashalw starts a hash table like #hash, except that it constructs a hash table based on equal-always? instead of equal?.
A #hasheq starts a hash table like #hash, except that it constructs a hash table based on eq? instead of equal?.
A #hasheqv starts a hash table like #hash, except that it constructs a hash table based on eqv? instead of equal?.
In all cases, the table is constructed by adding each mapping to the hash table from left to right, so later mappings can hide earlier mappings if the keys are equivalent.
Examples, where make-... stands for make-immutable-hash: | |||||||||||||||
|
1.3.13 Reading Boxes
When the reader encounters a #&, it starts parsing a box; see Boxes for information on boxes. The content of the box is determined by recursively reading the next datum.
In read-syntax mode, the recursive read for the box content is also in read-syntax mode, so that the wrapped box’s content is also wrapped as a syntax object, and the box is immutable.
Examples: | |||
|
1.3.14 Reading Characters
Characters in The Racket Guide introduces the syntax of characters.
A #\ starts a character constant, which has one of the following forms:
#\nul or #\null: NUL (ASCII 0); the next character must not be alphabetic.
#\backspace: backspace (ASCII 8); the next character must not be alphabetic.
#\tab: tab (ASCII 9); the next character must not be alphabetic.
#\newline or #\linefeed: linefeed (ASCII 10); the next character must not be alphabetic.
#\vtab: vertical tab (ASCII 11); the next character must not be alphabetic.
#\page: page break (ASCII 12); the next character must not be alphabetic.
#\return: carriage return (ASCII 13); the next character must not be alphabetic.
#\space: space (ASCII 32); the next character must not be alphabetic.
#\rubout: delete (ASCII 127); the next character must not be alphabetic.
#\‹digit8›{3,3}: Unicode for the octal number specified by three octal digits—
as in string escapes (see Reading Strings), but constrained to exactly three digits. #\u‹digit16›{1,4}: Unicode for the hexadecimal number specified by ‹digit16›{1,4}, as in string escapes (see Reading Strings).
#\U‹digit16›{1,8}: like #\u, but with up to eight hexadecimal digits (although only six digits are actually useful).
#\‹c›: the character ‹c›, as long as #\‹c› and the characters following it do not match any of the previous cases, as long as ‹c› or the character after ‹c› is not alphabetic, and as long as ‹c› is not an octal digit or is not followed by an octal digit (i.e., two octal digits commit to a third).
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1.3.15 Reading Keywords
A #: starts a keyword. The parsing of a keyword after the #: is the same as for a symbol, including case-folding in case-insensitive mode, except that the part after #: is never parsed as a number. The resulting keyword is interned.
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1.3.16 Reading Regular Expressions
A #rx or #px starts a regular expression. The characters immediately after #rx or #px must parse as a string or byte string (see Reading Strings). A #rx prefix starts a regular expression as would be constructed by regexp, #px as constructed by pregexp, #rx# as constructed by byte-regexp, and #px# as constructed by byte-pregexp. The resulting regular expression is interned in read-syntax mode.
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1.3.17 Reading Graph Structure
A #‹digit10›{1,8}= tags the following datum for reference via #‹digit10›{1,8}#, which allows the reader to produce a datum that has graph structure.
In read mode, for a specific ‹digit10›{1,8} in a single read result, each #‹digit10›{1,8}# reference is replaced by the datum read for the corresponding #‹digit10›{1,8}=; the definition #‹digit10›{1,8}= also produces just the datum after it. A #‹digit10›{1,8}= definition can appear at most once, and a #‹digit10›{1,8}= definition must appear before a #‹digit10›{1,8}# reference appears, otherwise the exn:fail:read exception is raised. If the read-accept-graph parameter is set to #f, then #‹digit10›{1,8}= or #‹digit10›{1,8}# triggers a exn:fail:read exception.
In read-syntax mode, graph structure is parsed the same way as in read mode. However, since syntax objects made from plain S-expressions may not contain cycles, each #‹digit10›{1,8}= definition and #‹digit10›{1,8}# reference is replaced with a placeholder in the result that contains the referenced value. Since such syntax objects are not directly useful (they cannot be marshaled to compiled code and are therefore rejected by the default compilation handler), parsing of graph structure in read-syntax mode is controlled by the separate read-syntax-accept-graph parameter, which is initially set to #f.
Although a comment parsed via #; discards the datum afterward, #‹digit10›{1,8}= definitions in the discarded datum still can be referenced by other parts of the reader input, as long as both the comment and the reference are grouped together by some other form (i.e., some recursive read); a top-level #; comment neither defines nor uses graph tags for other top-level forms.
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Changed in version 8.4.0.8 of package base: Added support for reading graph structure in read-syntax mode if enabled by read-syntax-accept-graph.
1.3.18 Reading via an Extension
Reader Extensions in The Racket Guide introduces reader extension.
When the reader encounters #reader, it loads an external reader procedure and applies it to the current input stream.
The reader recursively reads the next datum after #reader, and passes it to the procedure that is the value of the current-reader-guard parameter; the result is used as a module path. The module path is passed to dynamic-require with either 'read or 'read-syntax (depending on whether the reader is in read or read-syntax mode) while holding the registry lock via namespace-call-with-registry-lock. The module is loaded in a root namespace of the current namespace.
The arity of the resulting procedure determines whether it accepts extra source-location information: a read procedure accepts either one argument (an input port) or five, and a read-syntax procedure accepts either two arguments (a name value and an input port) or six. In either case, the four optional arguments are the reader’s module path (as a syntax object in read-syntax mode) followed by the line (positive exact integer or #f), column (non-negative exact integer or #f), and position (positive exact integer or #f) of the start of the #reader form. The input port is the one whose stream contained #reader, where the stream position is immediately after the recursively read module path.
The procedure should produce a datum result. If the result is a syntax object in read mode, then it is converted to a datum using syntax->datum; if the result is not a syntax object in read-syntax mode, then it is converted to one using datum->syntax. See also Reader-Extension Procedures for information on the procedure’s results.
If the read-accept-reader parameter is set to #f, then if the reader encounters #reader, the exn:fail:read exception is raised.
The #lang Shorthand in The Racket Guide introduces #lang.
The #lang reader form is similar to #reader, but more constrained: the #lang must be followed by a single space (ASCII 32), and then a non-empty sequence of alphanumeric ASCII, +, -, _, and/or / characters terminated by whitespace or an end-of-file. The sequence must not start or end with /. A sequence #lang ‹name› is equivalent to either #reader (submod ‹name› reader) or #reader ‹name›/lang/reader, where the former is tried first guarded by a module-declared? check (but after filtering by current-reader-guard, so both are passed to the value of current-reader-guard if the latter is used). Note that the terminating whitespace (if any) is not consumed before the external reading procedure is called.
Defining new #lang Languages in The Racket Guide introduces the creation languages for #lang.
Finally, #! is an alias for #lang followed by a space when #! is followed by alphanumeric ASCII, +, -, or _. Use of this alias is discouraged except as needed to construct programs that conform to certain grammars, such as that of R6RS [Sperber07].
The syntax/module-reader library provides a domain-specific language for writing language readers.
By convention, #lang normally appears at the beginning of a file, possibly after comment forms, to specify the syntax of a module.
If the read-accept-reader or read-accept-lang parameter is set to #f, then if the reader encounters #lang or equivalent #!, the exn:fail:read exception is raised.
Changed in version 8.2.0.2 of package base: Changed reader-module loading for #reader and #lang to hold the current namespace registry’s lock.
1.3.19 Reading with C-style Infix-Dot Notation
When the read-cdot parameter is set to #t, then a variety of changes occur in the reader.
First, symbols can no longer include the character ., unless the . is quoted with | or \.
Second, numbers can no longer include the character ., unless the number is prefixed with #e, #i, #b, #o, #d, #x, or an equivalent prefix as discussed in Reading Numbers. If these numbers are followed by a . intended to be read as a C-style infix dot, then a delimiter must precede the ..
Finally, after reading any datum x, the reader will consume whitespace, BOM characters, and comments to look for zero or more sequences of a . followed by another datum y. It will then group x and y with '#%dot so that x.y reads equal to reading (#%dot x y).
If x.y has another . after it, the reader will accumulate more .-separated datums, grouping them from left-to-right. For example, x.y.z reads equal to reading (#%dot (#%dot x y) z).
In read-syntax mode, the '#%dot symbol has the source location information of the . character and the entire list has the source location information spanning from the start of x to the end of y.
1.3.19.1 S-Expression Reader Language
#lang s-exp | package: base |
Using #lang s-exp in The Racket Guide introduces the s-exp meta-language.
The s-exp “language” is a kind of meta-language. It reads the S-expression that follows #lang s-exp and uses it as the language of a module form. It also reads all remaining S-expressions until an end-of-file, using them for the body of the generated module.
That is,
#lang s-exp module-path form ...
is equivalent to
(module name-id module-path form ...)
where name-id is derived from the source input port’s name: if the port name is a filename path, the filename without its directory path and extension is used for name-id, otherwise name-id is anonymous-module.
1.3.19.2 Chaining Reader Language
#lang reader | package: base |
Using #lang reader in The Racket Guide introduces the reader meta-language.
The reader “language” is a kind of meta-language. It reads the S-expression that follows #lang reader and uses it as a module path (relative to the module being read) that effectively takes the place of reader. In other words, the reader meta-language generalizes the syntax of the module specified after #lang to be a module path, and without the implicit addition of /lang/reader to the path.