Variables, syntactic keywords, and regionsAn identifier can name either a type of syntax or a location where a value can be stored. An identifier that names a type of syntax is called a syntactic keyword and is said to be bound to a transformer for that syntax. An identifier that names a location is called a variable and is said to be bound to that location. The set of all visible bindings in effect at some point in a program is known as the environment in effect at that point. The value stored in the location to which a variable is bound is called the variable's value. By abuse of terminology, the variable is sometimes said to name the value or to be bound to the value. This is not quite accurate, but confusion rarely results from this practice.
Certain expression types are used to create new kinds of syntax
and to bind syntactic keywords to those new syntaxes, while other
expression types create new locations and bind variables to those
locations. These expression types are called binding constructs.
Those that bind syntactic keywords are listed in section 4.3.
The most fundamental of the variable binding constructs is the
Scheme is a language with
block structure. To each place where an identifier is bound in a program
there corresponds a region of the program text within which
the binding is visible. The region is determined by the particular
binding construct that establishes the binding; if the binding is
established by a |