I've just verified that the implementations of unquote and unquote-splicing in Guile do not conform to R6RS. Perhaps this is intentional, but it would be a shame because the change in R6RS is certainly one for the better. Scheme's quasiquotation is defined very well (it's even used as a reference in Common Lisp's backquote definition) but ... it did have a major drawback. unquote (and unquote-splicing as well) cannot be applied to multiple expressions. This messes things up a little, especially when you're dealing with nested quasiquotations. Anyway, you can't do things like this (like you can in CL and R6RS): (let ((name 'foo)) `((unquote name name name))) => (foo foo foo) But the latter example is nothing. You can get around it in a second. There are however MUCH worse-case scenarios which, quite possibly, cannot be worked around (or at most with ugly solutions). The current rules for evaluation are (from R6RS): If an (unquote ...) form appears inside a , however, the s are evaluated (“unquoted”) and their results are inserted into the structure instead of the unquote form. If an (unquote-splicing ...) form appears inside a , then the s must evaluate to lists; the opening and closing parentheses of the lists are then “stripped away” and the elements of the lists are inserted in place of the unquote-splicing form. Any unquote-splicing or multi-operand unquote form must appear only within a list or vector . That just about says it all. Alan Bawden discussed the previous flaw in Scheme. Now it's cured. Hope to see the new rules in Guile too. -- Rocco Rossi E-Mail: rocco.rossi@gmail.com Profilo: http://www.google.com/profiles/rocco.rossi "Sono nato senza conoscere nulla e ho avuto un po' di tempo per cambiare qua e là questa mia condizione." (Richard P. Feynman)