Some documentation is provided with DrScheme, accessible through
Help Desk. Other documentation is provided online in HTML format and is also
available for download in Adobe PDF format at
DrScheme is absolutely free for anyone to use. However, there are
restrictions on the way that DrScheme can modified and
redistributed. Please read the GNU Library General Public License in
the distribution for details.
What operating systems are supported for DrScheme?
Windows (95 and up), Mac OS (9 and X), and Unix with the X Window
System.
How much memory is needed to run DrScheme?
To run DrScheme comfortably, your machine should have at least 32 MB
of RAM.
I don't have that much memory. Are there any other PLT options?
MrEd is PLT's raw graphical Scheme implementation (used to execute
DrScheme). MrEd provides a minimal read-eval-print loop, but MrEd
does not provide DrScheme's various languages, and error messages in
MrEd do not provide a source code location.
MzScheme is PLT's Scheme implementation. The language is the same as
MrEd without graphics. MzScheme provides little programming support,
so its memory requirements are minimal (a few MB usually suffices).
The standard DrScheme distribution includes all of the above programs.
MzScheme distributions can be downloaded through
Does DrScheme run under Mac OS versions earlier than 9?
No.
Does DrScheme run under DOS or Windows 3.1?
No.
Does MzScheme (PLT's text-only Scheme) run under DOS or Windows 3.1?
No.
How do I install DrScheme?
Obtain a DrScheme distribution from the above address. For Windows,
the distribution is an installer program; running this program
installs DrScheme. For MacOS, the distributiton is a StuffIt archive;
unpacking the archive mostly installs DrScheme, then run Setup
PLT to complete the installation. For Unix/X, the distribution is a
tarred and gzipped file; unpacking the archive and running
./install installs DrScheme. In all cases, the final download
page provides detailed, platform-specific installation instructions.
When I run plt.exe to install under Windows, it says
``corrupt installation detected.'' What went wrong?
The real problem may be that the installer is unable to write the
DrScheme files to your hard drive, or the installer may be unable to
modify the Start menu. In this case, check to make sure there
is disk space available, and contact your system maintainer to make
sure that you have the appropriate access privileges.
More details about this problem are available from the
Wise Solutions KnowledgeBase at
An average archive is around 4 MB. The Linux RPM distribution
is somewhat over 5.0 MB.
How much disk space does DrScheme consume?
Around 20 MB in its normal configuration, not including the optional
documentation. Some disk space (about 5MB) can be saved by deleting
all files with the suffix .zo. DrScheme does not need the
.zo files, but it starts up more slowly without them (so keep
them unless you really need the disk space).
How can I get my browser to find Help Desk when it's configured to use a Web proxy?
Help Desk uses a Web server running on the machine running DrScheme.
A Web proxy does not know about that server. In your browser options,
have the browser ignore the proxy for the address 127.0.0.1.
How do I run MrFlow, DrScheme's program analyzer (and the successor to MrSpidey)?
MrFlow is distributed separately from the standard DrScheme
distribution. Download MrFlow from
Starting with version 51, PLT distributes DrScheme without the
analysis tool. See the previous answer for information about
obtaining MrFlow.
How do I customize DrScheme?
The Edit menu contains a Preferences item that
opens the preferences dialog.
How do I turn off parenthesis-flashing and the gray background
behind expressions?
Use the Edit|Preferences menu item.
What are the key bindings in DrScheme?
Some basic key bindings are listed in the DrScheme manual, which is
accessible via the Help button in DrScheme.
Can I change the key bindings in DrScheme?
Technically, yes, but that requires in-depth information about the way
that DrScheme is implemented. (The necessary information is part of
the MrEd toolbox manual.) DrScheme currently provides no simple way
to adjust the keyboard mappings, other than to set the behavior of
the Delete key (via the preferences dialog).
What do those yellow-and-black messages mean, and how do I
get rid of them?
When text in the definitions window is modified, the current language
is changed, or the current library is changed, DrScheme
pessimistically assumes that some definition has been changed. In
this case, expressions evaluated in the interaction window would use
definitions that do not match those currently displayed in the
definitions windows. A yellow-and-black message warns you about this
potential inconsistency, and suggests that you resolve the
inconsistency by clicking the Execute button. To suppress
all but the first warning, see the Warnings tab in the
Preferences dialog.
Why can't I type in the interaction window before the the current
prompt?
To prevent accidental revisions of the interaction history, DrScheme
disallows editing before the current prompt. While old expressions
cannot be edited in place, you can copy old expressions to the
current prompt by typing Esc-p. Alternatively, place the insertion
caret at the end of any old expression in the interactions window and
type Enter or Return to copy the expression down to the current
prompt.
Is there a DrScheme compiler?
Technically, DrScheme is a compiler as well as an interpreter. Each
time the user loads a program or enters expression in the
interactions window, DrScheme compiles and then executes the program
or expression.
PLT's mzc transforms Scheme programs into C programs, and then uses
a third-party C compiler to produce executable code. Under Windows,
either Microsoft Visual C or gcc (a free compiler from Cygnus
Solutions) works as the C compiler. Under MacOS, CodeWarrior
works. Under Unix, most any compiler works.
For details, see the mzc documentation, available from:
Can I produce stand-alone executables from Scheme code?
To produce a standalone executable that only works for your particular
installation of DrScheme, see the executables section.
In addition, the mzc compiler can be used to produce stand-alone
executables. See the mzc documentation for more information.
Can files saved in DrScheme be transferred between platforms?
DrScheme saves files in two formats: text and multimedia.
The text format is the usual platform-specific text format. Tools for
moving files between platforms typically support a ``text'' transfer
mode that adjusts newlines and carriage returns in the test as
appropriate.
The multimedia format, used for saving files that contain pictures or
formatted text, is platform-indepdendent. Although no other program
is able to read DrScheme's special format, a multimedia-format file
can be moved between different platforms (in ``binary'' mode) and
DrScheme will read it correctly on the destination platform.
Does DrScheme really require at least 32 MB of memory?
Yes.
Why do programs run more slowly in DrScheme than in other
Scheme implementations (including PLT's own MzScheme)?
Programs run more slowly in DrScheme because DrScheme inserts extra
checks into a program to provide information about the location of
run-time errors. For many languages, these checks can be disabled by
un-checking Debugging in the details portion of the
language-selection dialog.
When I run DrScheme, it is very slow and the disk is
constantly running. Why?
You do not have enough memory to run DrScheme. If DrScheme works well
for a while, and then starts paging (using the disk a lot), then your
memory configuration is borderline for DrScheme. If DrScheme usually
works well and has only suddenly started this bad behavior, then
perhaps you have written a program that consumes an infinite amount of
memory.
My Macintosh has 32 MB of memory, but I am having trouble
with DrScheme. What can I do?
Make sure you quit all other applications before starting
DrScheme. Also, turn off any non-essential extensions. Select
About this Macintosh in the Finder's Apple menu and verify
that the system itself uses less than 10 MB.
I have successfully downloaded the installer program for Windows,
but the installation fails. Why?
If the installer reports a message such as ``corrupt installation
detected'', the real problem may be that the installer is unable to
write the DrScheme files to your hard drive, or the installer may be
unable to modify the Start menu. In this case, check to
make sure there is disk space available, or contact your system
maintainer to make sure that you have the appropriate access
privileges.
When I run DrScheme under MacOS, it sometimes freezes the whole
machine. Why? Are there any potential software conflicts?
You probably do not have enough memory to run DrScheme. There are no
known conflicts between DrScheme and other software.
I think I found a bug. What should I do?
First, read this section to make sure your problem does not have a
standard answer. If you need to, submit a bug report using the
form available from the home page of Help Desk. Alternatively,
you may submit a bug report using the Web at