Le jeu. 26 mars 2020 à 09:24,
Massimiliano Gubinelli <address@hidden>
a écrit :
Henri,
that's a great idea! Just this morning I showed to my 13yo
son how to use TeXmacs to type in his math exercises... he
seems appreciate the better quality wrt to Word :)
m
> On 26. Mar 2020, at 09:11, HG <address@hidden> wrote:
>
> Thank you :)
>
> I remenber I am french lol and I thaught of looking in
french tutorial, in fact there is a lot !
>
> I am looking for drawing and graphics because the
quarantine my son son 8 ans old has some maths to do. On w10
scheme seems the best integrated in texmacs ?
>
> I could use geogebra sagemath but I like texmacs for the
nice presentation and I would like to do a kind of tutorial
for CE1 kids (8ans) and upper. Not only in maths but in french
and others languages (chinese my wife being).
>
> Thank you all for your good help, it's important to not
feel alone in these moments
>
> best
>
> Henri
>
> Le 25/03/2020 à 22:41, Giovanni Piredda a écrit :
>>
>> On 25.03.20 21:48, Massimiliano Gubinelli wrote:
>>> There is documentation in the manual about
scheme:
>>>
>>> Help -> Scheme extensions -> Overview of
the scheme extension language.
>>>
>>> For general knowledge about the language you can
read any tutorial, there are many here:
>>>
>>> https://schemers.org
>>>
>>> hth,
>>> m
>>>
>>>
>>
>> Two tutorials which I liked are
>>
>> http://ds26gte.github.io/tyscheme/index.html
>>
>> and
>>
>> http://www.shido.info/lisp/idx_scm_e.html
>>
>> (the last one seems simpler to me).
>>
>>
>> The reference to Guile (the implementation of Scheme
use by TeXmacs) is
>>
>> https://www.gnu.org/software/guile/docs/docs-1.8/guile-ref/
>>
>> and one could use as well references to other
implementations as one could find some of the descriptions
easier to follow (but one has to keep in mind that the
details, e.g. which functions are defined, are different)
>>
>> MIT Scheme:
>>
>> https://groups.csail.mit.edu/mac/ftpdir/scheme-7.4/doc-html/scheme_toc.html
>>
>> Racket:
>>
>> https://docs.racket-lang.org/
>>
>> I have a quite rough knowledge of the language, but I
start "feeling" that the way to use it is through function
composition, not through a sequence of instructions (like one
does in Fortran for example). It "feels" like building
"things" with "objects" that become more complex (inside) as
the work goes on but nevertheless "fit together".
>>
>> But maybe it is just my imagination ;-)
>>