d05adcb023 | ||
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build | ||
cmake | ||
contrib | ||
docs | ||
etc | ||
extlib | ||
include | ||
piclib | ||
src | ||
t | ||
tools | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
.travis.yml | ||
AUTHORS | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md |
README.md
Picrin
Picrin is a lightweight scheme implementation intended to comply with full R7RS specification. Its code is written in pure C99 and does not requires any special external libraries installed on the platform.
Features
- R7RS compatibility (but partial support)
- reentrant design (all VM states are stored in single global state object)
- bytecode interpreter (based on stack VM)
- direct threaded VM
- internal representation by nan-boxing
- conservative call/cc implementation (users can freely interleave native stack with VM stack)
- exact GC (simple mark and sweep, partially reference count is used as well)
- string representation by rope data structure
- support full set hygienic macro transformers, including implicit renaming macros
- extended library syntax
- advanced REPL support (multi-line input, etc)
- tiny & portable library (all functions will be in
libpicrin.so
)
Libraries
- `(scheme base)`
- `(scheme write)`
- `(scheme cxr)`
- `(scheme file)`
- `(scheme inexact)`
- `(scheme time)`
- `(scheme process-context)`
- `(scheme load)`
- `(scheme lazy)`
- `(picrin macro)`
- `define-macro`
- `gensym`
- `macroexpand`
Old-fashioned macro.
- `make-syntactic-closure`
- `identifier?`
- `identifier=?`
Syntactic closures.
- `er-macro-transformer`
- `ir-macro-transformer`
Explicit renaming macro family.
- `(picrin regexp)`
- `(regexp? obj)`
- `(regexp ptrn [flags])`
Compiles pattern string into a regexp object. A string `flags` may contain any of #\g, #\i, #\m.
- `(regexp-match re input)`
Returns two values: a list of match strings, and a list of match indeces.
- `(regexp-replace re input txt)`
- `(regexp-split re input)`
- `(picrin user)`
When you start the REPL, you are dropped into here.
- `(srfi 1)`
List manipulation library.
- `(srfi 95)`
Sorting and Marging.
The REPL
At the REPL start-up time, some usuful built-in libraries listed below will be automatically imported.
(scheme base)
(scheme load)
(scheme process-context)
(scheme write)
(scheme file)
(scheme inexact)
(scheme cxr)
(scheme lazy)
(scheme time)
Compliance with R7RS
section | status | comments |
---|---|---|
2.2 Whitespace and comments | yes | |
2.3 Other notations | incomplete | #e #i #b #o #d #x |
2.4 Datum labels | yes | |
3.1 Variables, syntactic keywords, and regions | ||
3.2 Disjointness of types | yes | |
3.3 External representations | ||
3.4 Storage model | yes | |
3.5 Proper tail recursion | yes | As the report specifies, apply , call/cc , and call-with-values perform tail calls |
4.1.1 Variable references | yes | |
4.1.2 Literal expressions | yes | |
4.1.3 Procedure calls | yes | In picrin () is self-evaluating |
4.1.4 Procedures | yes | |
4.1.5 Conditionals | yes | In picrin (if #f #f) returns #f |
4.1.6 Assignments | yes | |
4.1.7 Inclusion | incomplete | include-ci . TODO: Once read is implemented rewrite include macro with it. |
4.2.1 Conditionals | incomplete | TODO: cond-expand |
4.2.2 Binding constructs | yes | |
4.2.3 Sequencing | yes | |
4.2.4 Iteration | yes | |
4.2.5 Delayed evaluation | N/A | |
4.2.6 Dynamic bindings | yes | |
4.2.7 Exception handling | no | guard syntax. |
4.2.8 Quasiquotation | yes | can be safely nested. TODO: multiple argument for unquote |
4.2.9 Case-lambda | N/A | |
4.3.1 Bindings constructs for syntactic keywords | incomplete | (*1) |
4.3.2 Pattern language | yes | syntax-rules |
4.3.3 Signaling errors in macro transformers | yes | |
5.1 Programs | yes | |
5.2 Import declarations | incomplete | only simple import declarations, no support for import with renaming. |
5.3.1 Top level definitions | yes | |
5.3.2 Internal definitions | yes | TODO: interreferential definitions |
5.3.3 Multiple-value definitions | yes | |
5.4 Syntax definitions | yes | TODO: internal macro definition is not supported. |
5.5 Recored-type definitions | yes | |
5.6.1 Library Syntax | incomplete | In picrin, libraries can be reopend and can be nested. |
5.6.2 Library example | N/A | |
5.7 The REPL | yes | |
6.1 Equivalence predicates | yes | TODO: equal? must terminate if circular structure is given |
6.2.1 Numerical types | yes | picrin has only two types of internal representation of numbers: fixnum and double float. It still comforms the R7RS spec. |
6.2.2 Exactness | yes | |
6.2.3 Implementation restrictions | yes | |
6.2.4 Implementation extensions | yes | |
6.2.5 Syntax of numerical constants | yes | |
6.2.6 Numerical operations | yes | denominator , numerator , and rationalize are not supported for now. Also, picrin does not provide complex library procedures. |
6.2.7 Numerical input and output | incomplete | only partial support supplied. |
6.3 Booleans | yes | |
6.4 Pairs and lists | yes | list? is safe for using against circular list. |
6.5 Symbols | yes | |
6.6 Characters | yes | |
6.7 Strings | yes | |
6.8 Vectors | yes | |
6.9 Bytevectors | yes | |
6.10 Control features | yes | |
6.11 Exceptions | yes | raise-continuable is not supported |
6.12 Environments and evaluation | N/A | |
6.13.1 Ports | yes | |
6.13.2 Input | incomplete | TODO: binary input |
6.13.3 Output | yes | |
6.14 System interface | yes |
- Picrin provides hygienic macros in addition to so-called legacy macro (
define-macro
), such as syntactic closure, explicit renaming macro, and implicit renaming macro. As of now let-syntax and letrec-syntax are not provided.
Homepage
Currently picrin is hosted on Github. You can freely send a bug report or pull-request, and fork the repository.
https://github.com/wasabiz/picrin
IRC
There is a chat room on chat.freenode.org, channel #picrin.
How to use it
-
make
Makefile
Change directory to
build
then runcmake
to create Makefile. OnceMakefile
is generated you can runmake
command to build picrin.$ cd build $ cmake ..
Actually you don't necessarily need to move to
build
directory before runningcmake
(in that case$ cmake .
), but I strongly recommend to follow above instruction. -
build
A built executable binary will be under bin/ directory and shared libraries under lib/.
$ make
If you are building picrin on other systems than x86_64, PIC_NAN_BOXING flag is automatically turned on (see include/picrin/config.h for detail).
-
install
Just running
make install
, picrin library, headers, and runtime binary are install on your system, by default into/usr/local
directory. You can change this value via ccmake.$ make install
-
run
Before installing picrin, you can try picrin without breaking any of your system. Simply directly run the binary
bin/picrin
from terminal, or you can usemake
to execute it like this.$ make run
-
debug run
If you execute
cmake
with debug flag-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug
, it builds the binary with all debug flags enabled (PIC_GC_STRESS, VM_DEBUG, DEBUG).$ cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ..
Requirement
Picrin scheme depends on some external libraries to build the binary:
- lex (preferably, flex)
- getopt
- readline (optional)
- regex.h of POSIX.1 (optional)
Optional libraries are, if cmake detected them, automatically enabled. The compilation is tested only on Mac OSX and Ubuntu. I think (or hope) it'll be ok to compile and run on other operating systems such as Arch or Windows, but I don't guarantee :(
Authors
See AUTHORS