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Hey everyone, I want to start using Scheme and I have two questions. First, would you recommend using an interpreter or a compiler for Scheme and why? Second, which interpreter or compiler for Scheme would you recommend and why? Thanks!

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See here for existing answers: stackoverflow.com/questions/2327252/… – Nathan Sanders Mar 26 '10 at 13:48
My question was a little different then those, but thanks! – Silmaril89 Mar 26 '10 at 20:31
BTW, as a "what is the best" question without clarifying details, this one seems awfully subjective. If there was agreement on a single best scheme implementations (for all purposes and use cases), we'd only have one! – Charles Duffy Mar 27 '10 at 16:36

5 Answers

up vote 9 down vote accepted

For a beginner, I would highly recommend Dr. Scheme, since it gives you a really nice environment to work in, supports many dialects of Scheme, and gives very good failure and debugging information. I believe most implementations of Scheme are interpreters, although it is possible that there is a compiler out there.

If you are a commandline junkie like me, an alternative you might consider is mzscheme, which is essentially the same thing as Dr. Scheme, but without the graphical environment and a commandline interface.

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1  
Dr. Scheme is one of the most complete interpreters I have used. Very useful for beginners who get stuck at the command line and cannot translate the cryptic error messages into where the code is wrong. – ecounysis Mar 26 '10 at 6:41
2  
Actually there more big-name Scheme compilers than interpreters: ikarus, chez (the non-free version), gambit, chicken, bigloo. In fact mzscheme/DrScheme is JITted in current versions. See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Scheme_compilers – Nathan Sanders Mar 26 '10 at 13:54
I am a command-line junkie too, I have been using Dr. Scheme a bit, but I will give mzscheme a try too. I've also been using gambit-c a little too, any thoughts on that? – Silmaril89 Mar 26 '10 at 15:47

I know you already accepted the answer, but for future visitors to this question, I recommend Chicken Scheme. It tends to produce much smaller executables than mzscheme does. Take the following hello world application, for instance:

(define (say-hello name)
  (print (string-append "Hello, " name))
  (newline))

(say-hello "Earthling")

Compiled with mzc --exec mztest hello.scm: 3.3M

Compiled with csc hello.scm -o ctest: 16k

And if you're after library support, Chicken provides Eggs Unlimited, which is like PlaneT for mzscheme (or gems for ruby).

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thanks for the suggestion. – Silmaril89 Mar 28 '10 at 2:19
2  
Chicken owns. I actually get to use it for real work, too. And don't forget about Gambit-C, either. – Jyaan Oct 22 '10 at 5:42
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AFAIK mzscheme creates an statically linked executable, whereas chicken scheme's dynamically linked against libchicken. – Rui Vieira May 21 '11 at 10:10
That's right, try to run that 16k file in your platform without Chicken Scheme. It is dynamically linked. – alvatar Dec 14 '12 at 14:32

I'd recommend not being concerned about whether it's implemented as a compiler, interpreter, or combination thereof -- especially to start with, the quality of help files (for one example) will matter far more than exactly how it's implemented.

As far as which one, PLT Scheme is what I use (by far) the most often.

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Thanks for the suggestion. I'm using PLT Scheme and I like it a lot. – Silmaril89 Mar 29 '10 at 20:49

PTL Scheme has been renamed to Racket (http://racket-lang.org/), but it's still pretty much the same. Dr. Racket is a very nifty development environment with a shell, and to write in Scheme all you need is #lang scheme at the top of your file.

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I'd recommend Gambit-C scheme:

  • It's R5RS-conformant.
  • It has both an interpreter and a compiler. You can also compile to ANSI C.
  • It's open source.
  • It's portable. (It runs on Linux, Windows, Mac OS X and even iOS.)
  • It has simple foreign function interfaces (FFI).

A cursory examination reveals that Chicken seems unsatisfactory, while Bigloo may be a serious contender. But I cannot comment too much about them.

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What did you find unsatisfactory about Chicken Scheme? – Omar May 9 at 14:38

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