Reputation:
I want to type something like 'scheme file.scm' and have it interpret the file, and then take me back to my shell, rather than loading it in the REPL.
edit: I tried scheme < test.scm and it still uses the REPL, the only difference is that scheme exits when the stream ends.
Upvotes: 58
Views: 24598
Reputation: 881507
scheme < file.scm
should work (as long as you don't specify --interactive
and stdin is not a terminal, scheme works non-interactively).
Upvotes: 51
Reputation: 10920
To run a scheme program using MIT Scheme:
scheme --quiet < program.scm
The --quiet
option ensures that the output from your program is the only thing that is displayed (i.e. you won't see the REPL, as per your requirements).
Caveat: This will not work if your program prompts the user for input using the input procedures (e.g. read
, read-char
, read-line
, etc.). This is because of the shell input redirection (<
) (See: relevant question). Unfortunately, there is currently no proper way of executing an MIT Scheme script from the command line when input procedures are used. The best option is probably mit-scheme --quiet --load 'myscript'
, but you'd have to manually exit MIT Scheme when the script finishes. Relevant mailing list thread: [MIT-Scheme-devel] How to run a script and exit?
EDIT: Due to the possibility that you may mistype <
as >
, resulting in the overwrite of your source code, I would suggest encapsulating the above command within a shell script or a shell function. For example:
runscheme () {
scheme --quiet < "$1"
}
Then you can run runscheme program.scm
without fear that your source code will be overwritten. (Special thanks to Paul Rooney for bringing this potential mistake to my attention).
scheme --help
:
--batch-mode, --quiet, --silent
Suppresses the startup report of versions and copyrights, and the valediction.
This command line option seems to have been mistakenly ommitted from the list of command line options in the documentation, but I think this is a legimate command line option because scheme --help
shows it, and because --batch-mode
is used in other parts of the reference manual (e.g. here).
Upvotes: 18
Reputation: 137
checked chez --help
, and then I found this(let's say that I'm using chez scheme):
chez --script ./temp.scm
Also, --verbose
is very useful:
chez --verbose --script ./temp.scm
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 99
I think what you want is SCM. You can execute a .scm script like this:
$ scm -f foo.scm arg1 arg2 arg3
See http://people.csail.mit.edu/jaffer/scm_3.html#SEC28 for more details.
The SCM homepage: http://people.csail.mit.edu/jaffer/SCM
Upvotes: 8