The types objection may apply to Clojure (I've never used it, I don't know) but one of Racket's major development thrusts has been providing a way to get the benefits of both typed and untyped languages. * Racket has a…
The types objection may apply to Clojure (I've never used it, I don't know) but one of Racket's major development thrusts has been providing a way to get the benefits of both typed and untyped languages. * Racket has a…