Which LISP should I learn? Years ago I read about Scheme and wrote some hello world level code. I learned about lambda functions and currying. I also looked at racket. A few years ago, much of my day job involved the JVM and I was getting sick of Java so I got a book on Clojure, which is a very nice language, but I never wrote any.
A few days ago I downloaded and built the latest version of DrRacket.
Should I go straight to Haskell? Or what about other functional languages? Is Erlang worth a look?
I need something stimulating to distract my brain from the mundane nature of everyday life, and mediocre programming languages.
(Score: 3, Interesting) by hendrikboom on Monday November 29 2021, @07:41PM
Racket has mechanisms for implementing new languages on top of the built-in Racket base. It's been used for implementing Algol 60, for example.
But most of the Racket-built languages are similar in syntax to Racket, such as typed Racket.