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authorAdam <adam@adambard.com>2013-08-01 11:24:23 -0700
committerAdam <adam@adambard.com>2013-08-01 11:24:23 -0700
commit4ecd73fc9cd766557e10fc2fa0c3351c373ff1a0 (patch)
treecf5c3e2fa0847d482e050634c0cb43b6b1bedade /whip.html.markdown
parent45db7b9fc515b5ae48420bf624bfdcada8e21faa (diff)
An assortment
Diffstat (limited to 'whip.html.markdown')
-rw-r--r--whip.html.markdown13
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/whip.html.markdown b/whip.html.markdown
index 3fe9b2f4..b8852ecb 100644
--- a/whip.html.markdown
+++ b/whip.html.markdown
@@ -12,8 +12,8 @@ It has also borrowed a lot of functions and syntax from Haskell(a non-related la
These docs were written by the creator of the language himself. So is this line.
-``` lisp
-; Comments are like LISP. Semi-solons...
+```scheme
+; Comments are like LISP. Semi-colons...
; Majority of first-level statements are inside "forms"
; which are just things inside parens separated by whitespace
@@ -107,14 +107,14 @@ undefined ; user to indicate a value that hasn't been set
; They basically are just forms without functions at the beginning.
(1 2 3) ; => [1, 2, 3] (JavaScript syntax)
-; Dictionaries are Whip's equivalent to JavaScript 'objects' or Python 'dictionaries'
+; Dictionaries are Whip's equivalent to JavaScript 'objects' or Python 'dicts'
; or Ruby 'hashes': an unordered collection of key-value pairs.
{"key1":"value1" "key2":2 3:3}
; Keys are just values, either identifier, number, or string.
(def my_dict {my_key:"my_value" "my other key":4})
-; But in Whip, dictionaries get parsed like: value, colon, value; with whitespace between each.
-; So that means
+; But in Whip, dictionaries get parsed like: value, colon, value;
+; with whitespace between each. So that means
{"key": "value"
"another key"
: 1234
@@ -122,7 +122,8 @@ undefined ; user to indicate a value that hasn't been set
; is evaluated to the same as
{"key":"value" "another key":1234}
-; Dictionary definitions can be accessed used the `at` function, like strings and lists.
+; Dictionary definitions can be accessed used the `at` function
+; (like strings and lists.)
(@ "my other key" my_dict) ; => 4
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