1 | <?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
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2 | <!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
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3 | "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd" [
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4 | <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../../general.ent">
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5 | %general-entities;
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6 | ]>
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7 |
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8 | <sect1 id="other-tools" xreflabel="Other Programming Tools">
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9 | <?dbhtml filename="other-tools.html"?>
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10 |
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11 | <sect1info>
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12 | <othername>$LastChangedBy$</othername>
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13 | <date>$Date$</date>
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14 | </sect1info>
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15 |
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16 | <title>Other Programming Tools</title>
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17 |
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18 | <indexterm zone="other-tools">
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19 | <primary sortas="a-Other-Programming-Tools">Other Programming Tools</primary>
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20 | </indexterm>
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21 |
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22 | <sect2 role="introduction">
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23 | <title>Introduction</title>
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24 |
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25 | <para>This section is provided to show you some additional programming
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26 | tools for which instructions have not yet been created in the book or for
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27 | those that are not appropriate for the book. Note that these packages may
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28 | not have been tested by the BLFS team, but their mention here is meant to
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29 | be a convenient source of additional information.</para>
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30 |
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31 | <para condition="html" role="usernotes">User Notes:
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32 | <ulink url="&blfs-wiki;/OtherProgrammingTools"/></para>
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33 |
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34 | </sect2>
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35 |
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36 | <sect2>
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37 | <title>Programming Frameworks, Languages and Compilers</title>
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38 |
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39 | <!-- This is a template for additions to this page. Cut 18 lines and
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40 | paste them in alphabetical order for the new package. '18dd' and
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41 | move down to the alpha order and 'p' works great (using vi).
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42 |
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43 | <sect3 role="package">
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44 | <title></title>
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45 |
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46 | <para><application></application> This is the description.</para>
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47 |
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48 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
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49 | <listitem>
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50 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
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51 | url=""/></para>
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52 | </listitem>
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53 | <listitem>
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54 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
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55 | url=""/></para>
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56 | </listitem>
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57 | </itemizedlist>
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58 |
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59 | </sect3>
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60 |
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61 | -->
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62 |
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63 | <sect3 role="package">
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64 | <title>A+</title>
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65 |
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66 | <para><application>A+</application> is a powerful and efficient
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67 | programming language. It is freely available under the GNU General
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68 | Public License. It embodies a rich set of functions and operators, a
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69 | modern graphical user interface with many widgets and automatic
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70 | synchronization of widgets and variables, asynchronous execution of
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71 | functions associated with variables and events, dynamic loading of user
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72 | compiled subroutines, and many other features. Execution is by a rather
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73 | efficient interpreter. <application>A+</application> was created at
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74 | Morgan Stanley. Primarily used in a computationally-intensive business
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75 | environment, many critical applications written in
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76 | <application>A+</application> have withstood the demands of real world
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77 | developers over many years. Written in an interpreted language,
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78 | <application>A+</application> applications tend to be portable.</para>
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79 |
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80 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
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81 | <listitem>
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82 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
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83 | url="http://www.aplusdev.org/"/></para>
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84 | </listitem>
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85 | <listitem>
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86 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
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87 | url="http://www.aplusdev.org/Download/index.html"/></para>
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88 | </listitem>
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89 | </itemizedlist>
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90 |
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91 | </sect3>
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92 |
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93 | <sect3 role="package">
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94 | <title>ABC</title>
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95 |
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96 | <para><application>ABC</application> is an interactive programming
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97 | language and environment for personal computing, originally intended as a
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98 | good replacement for BASIC. It was designed by first doing a task
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99 | analysis of the programming task. <application>ABC</application> is easy
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100 | to learn (an hour or so for someone who has already programmed), and yet
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101 | easy to use. Originally intended as a language for beginners, it has
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102 | evolved into a powerful tool for beginners and experts alike. Some
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103 | features of the language include: a powerful collection of only five data
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104 | types that easily combines strong typing, yet without declarations,
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105 | no limitations (such as max int), apart from sheer exhaustion of memory
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106 | refinements to support top-down programming, nesting by indentation and
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107 | programs typically are one fourth or one fifth the size of the equivalent
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108 | Pascal or C program. </para>
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109 |
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110 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
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111 | <listitem>
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112 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
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113 | url="http://homepages.cwi.nl/~steven/abc/"/></para>
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114 | </listitem>
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115 | <listitem>
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116 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
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117 | url="http://homepages.cwi.nl/~steven/abc/implementations.html"/></para>
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118 | </listitem>
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119 | </itemizedlist>
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120 |
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121 | </sect3>
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122 |
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123 | <sect3 role="package">
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124 | <title>ALF</title>
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125 |
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126 | <para><application>ALF</application> is a language which combines
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127 | functional and logic programming techniques. The foundation of
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128 | <application>ALF</application> is Horn clause logic with equality which
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129 | consists of predicates and Horn clauses for logic programming, and
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130 | functions and equations for functional programming. The
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131 | <application>ALF</application> system is an efficient implementation of
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132 | the combination of resolution, narrowing, rewriting and rejection.
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133 | Similarly to Prolog, <application>ALF</application> uses a backtracking
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134 | strategy corresponding to a depth-first search in the derivation
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135 | tree.</para>
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136 |
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137 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
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138 | <listitem>
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139 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
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140 | url="http://www.informatik.uni-kiel.de/~mh/systems/ALF.html"/></para>
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141 | </listitem>
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142 | <listitem>
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143 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
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144 | url="http://www.informatik.uni-kiel.de/~mh/systems/ALF/"/></para>
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145 | </listitem>
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146 | </itemizedlist>
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147 |
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148 | </sect3>
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149 |
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150 | <sect3 role="package">
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151 | <title>ASM</title>
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152 |
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153 | <para><application>ASM</application> is a Java bytecode manipulation
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154 | framework. It can be used to dynamically generate stub classes or other
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155 | proxy classes, directly in binary form, or to dynamically modify
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156 | classes at load time, i.e., just before they are loaded into the Java
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157 | Virtual Machine. <application>ASM</application> offers similar
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158 | functionalities as BCEL or SERP, but is much smaller (33KB instead of
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159 | 350KB for BCEL and 150KB for SERP) and faster than these tools (the
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160 | overhead of a load time class transformation is of the order of 60% with
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161 | <application>ASM</application>, 700% or more with BCEL, and 1100% or
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162 | more with SERP). Indeed <application>ASM</application> was designed to be
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163 | used in a dynamic way (though it works statically as well) and was
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164 | therefore designed and implemented to be as small and as fast as
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165 | possible.</para>
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166 |
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167 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
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168 | <listitem>
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169 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
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170 | url="http://asm.objectweb.org/"/></para>
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171 | </listitem>
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172 | <listitem>
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173 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
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174 | url="http://forge.objectweb.org/projects/asm/"/></para>
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175 | </listitem>
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176 | </itemizedlist>
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177 |
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178 | </sect3>
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179 |
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180 | <sect3 role="package">
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181 | <title>BCPL</title>
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182 |
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183 | <para><application>BCPL</application> is a simple typeless language that
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184 | was designed in 1966 by Martin Richards and implemented for the first
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185 | time at MIT in the Spring of 1967.</para>
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186 |
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187 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
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188 | <listitem>
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189 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
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190 | url="http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/mr/BCPL.html"/></para>
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191 | </listitem>
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192 | <listitem>
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193 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
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194 | url="http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/mr/BCPL/"/></para>
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195 | </listitem>
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196 | </itemizedlist>
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197 |
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198 | </sect3>
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199 |
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200 | <sect3 role="package">
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201 | <title>BETA</title>
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202 |
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203 | <para><application>BETA</application> is developed within the
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204 | Scandinavian School of object-orientation, where the first
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205 | object-oriented language, Simula, was developed.
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206 | <application>BETA</application> is a modern language in the Simula
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207 | tradition. The resulting language is smaller than Simula in spite of
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208 | being considerably more expressive. <application>BETA</application> is a
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209 | strongly typed language like Simula, Eiffel and C++, with most type
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210 | checking being carried out at compile-time. It is well known that it is
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211 | not possible to obtain all type checking at compile time without
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212 | sacrificing the expressiveness of the language.
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213 | <application>BETA</application> has optimum balance between compile-time
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214 | type checking and run-time type checking.</para>
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215 |
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216 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
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217 | <listitem>
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218 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
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219 | url="http://www.daimi.au.dk/~beta/"/></para>
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220 | </listitem>
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221 | <listitem>
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222 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
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223 | url="ftp://ftp.daimi.au.dk/pub/beta/"/></para>
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224 | </listitem>
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225 | </itemizedlist>
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226 |
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227 | </sect3>
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228 |
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229 | <sect3 role="package">
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230 | <title><bigwig></title>
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231 |
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232 | <para><application><bigwig></application> is a high-level
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233 | programming language for developing interactive Web services. Programs
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234 | are compiled into a conglomerate of lower-level technologies such as C
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235 | code, HTTP, HTML, JavaScript, and SSL, all running on top of a runtime
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236 | system based on an Apache Web server module. It is a descendant of the
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237 | Mawl project but is a completely new design and implementation with
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238 | vastly expanded ambitions. The <application><bigwig></application>
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239 | language is really a collection of tiny domain-specific languages
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240 | focusing on different aspects of interactive Web services. These
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241 | contributing languages are held together by a C-like skeleton language.
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242 | Thus, <application><bigwig></application> has the look and feel of
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243 | C-programs but with special data and control structures.</para>
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244 |
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245 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
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246 | <listitem>
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247 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
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248 | url="http://www.brics.dk/bigwig/"/></para>
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249 | </listitem>
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250 | <listitem>
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251 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
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252 | url="http://www.brics.dk/bigwig/download/"/></para>
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253 | </listitem>
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254 | </itemizedlist>
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255 |
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256 | </sect3>
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257 |
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258 | <sect3 role="package">
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259 | <title>Bigloo</title>
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260 |
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261 | <para><application>Bigloo</application> is a Scheme implementation
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262 | devoted to one goal: enabling Scheme based programming style where C(++)
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263 | is usually required. <application>Bigloo</application> attempts to make
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264 | Scheme practical by offering features usually presented by traditional
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265 | programming languages but not offered by Scheme and functional
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266 | programming. Bigloo compiles Scheme modules and delivers small and fast
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267 | stand-alone binary executables. It enables full connections between
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268 | Scheme and C programs, between Scheme and Java programs, and between
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269 | Scheme and C# programs.</para>
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270 |
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271 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
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272 | <listitem>
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273 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
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274 | url="http://www-sop.inria.fr/mimosa/fp/Bigloo/"/></para>
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275 | </listitem>
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276 | <listitem>
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277 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
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278 | url="ftp://ftp-sop.inria.fr/mimosa/fp/Bigloo/"/></para>
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279 | </listitem>
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280 | </itemizedlist>
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281 |
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282 | </sect3>
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283 |
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284 | <sect3 role="package">
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285 | <title>C--</title>
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286 |
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287 | <para><application>C--</application> is a portable assembly language that
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288 | can be generated by a front end and implemented by any of several code
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289 | generators. It serves as an interface between high-level compilers and
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290 | retargetable, optimizing code generators. Authors of front ends and code
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291 | generators can cooperate easily.</para>
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292 |
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293 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
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294 | <listitem>
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295 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
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296 | url="http://www.cminusminus.org/"/></para>
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297 | </listitem>
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298 | <listitem>
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299 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
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300 | url="http://www.cminusminus.org/code.html"/></para>
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301 | </listitem>
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302 | </itemizedlist>
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303 |
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304 | </sect3>
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305 |
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306 | <sect3 role="package">
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307 | <title>Caml</title>
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308 |
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309 | <para><application>Caml</application> is a general-purpose programming
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310 | language, designed with program safety and reliability in mind. It is
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311 | very expressive, yet easy to learn and use.
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312 | <application>Caml</application> supports functional, imperative, and
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313 | object-oriented programming styles. It has been developed and distributed
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314 | by INRIA, France's national research institute for computer science,
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315 | since 1985. The Objective Caml system is the main implementation of the
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316 | <application>Caml</application> language. It features a powerful module
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317 | system and a full-fledged object-oriented layer. It comes with a
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318 | native-code compiler that supports numerous architectures, for high
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319 | performance; a bytecode compiler, for increased portability; and an
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320 | interactive loop, for experimentation and rapid development.</para>
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321 |
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322 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
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323 | <listitem>
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324 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
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325 | url="http://caml.inria.fr/"/></para>
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326 | </listitem>
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327 | <listitem>
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328 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
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329 | url="http://caml.inria.fr/pub/distrib/"/></para>
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330 | </listitem>
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331 | </itemizedlist>
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332 |
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333 | </sect3>
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334 |
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335 | <sect3 role="package">
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336 | <title>Cayenne</title>
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337 |
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338 | <para><application>Cayenne</application> is a simple(?) functional
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339 | language with a powerful type system. The basic types are functions,
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340 | products, and sums. Functions and products use dependent types to gain
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341 | additional power. There are very few building blocks in the language, but
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342 | a lot of <quote>syntactic sugar</quote> to make it more readable. There
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343 | is no separate module language in <application>Cayenne</application>
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344 | since the dependent types allow the normal expression language to be used
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345 | at the module level as well. The design of
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346 | <application>Cayenne</application> has been heavily influenced by
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347 | <application>Haskell</application> and constructive type theory and with
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348 | some things borrowed from Java. The drawback of such a powerful type
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349 | system is that the type checking becomes undecidable.</para>
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350 |
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351 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
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352 | <listitem>
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353 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
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354 | url="http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~augustss/cayenne/"/></para>
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355 | </listitem>
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356 | <listitem>
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357 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
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358 | url="http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~augustss/cayenne/get.html"/></para>
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359 | </listitem>
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360 | </itemizedlist>
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361 |
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362 | </sect3>
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363 |
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364 | <sect3 role="package">
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365 | <title>Ch</title>
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366 |
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367 | <para><application>Ch</application> is an embeddable C/C++ interpreter
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368 | for cross-platform scripting, shell programming, 2D/3D plotting,
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369 | numerical computing, and embedded scripting.</para>
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370 |
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371 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
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372 | <listitem>
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373 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
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374 | url="http://www.softintegration.com/"/></para>
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375 | </listitem>
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376 | <listitem>
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377 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
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378 | url="http://www.softintegration.com/products/chstandard/download/"/></para>
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379 | </listitem>
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380 | </itemizedlist>
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381 |
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382 | </sect3>
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383 |
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384 | <sect3 role="package">
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385 | <title>Clean</title>
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386 |
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387 | <para><application>Clean</application> is a general purpose,
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388 | state-of-the-art, pure and lazy functional programming language designed
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389 | for making real-world applications. <application>Clean</application> is
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390 | the only functional language in the world which offers uniqueness typing.
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391 | This type system makes it possible in a pure functional language to
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392 | incorporate destructive updates of arbitrary data structures (including
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393 | arrays) and to make direct interfaces to the outside imperative world.
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394 | The type system makes it possible to develop efficient
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395 | applications.</para>
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396 |
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397 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
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398 | <listitem>
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399 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
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400 | url="http://wiki.clean.cs.ru.nl/Clean"/></para>
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401 | </listitem>
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402 | <listitem>
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403 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
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404 | url="http://wiki.clean.cs.ru.nl/Download_Clean"/></para>
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405 | </listitem>
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406 | </itemizedlist>
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407 |
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408 | </sect3>
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409 |
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410 | <sect3 role="package">
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411 | <title>CORN</title>
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412 |
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413 | <para><application>CORN</application> is designed for modeling
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414 | concurrency and advanced computation. It provides lazy evaluation between
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415 | concurrently worked threads, with object-oriented and functional style of
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416 | semantic. This language can be also used for parallel computation.</para>
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417 |
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418 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
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419 | <listitem>
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420 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
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421 | url="http://cornlanguage.com/"/></para>
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422 | </listitem>
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423 | <listitem>
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424 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
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425 | url="http://cornlanguage.com/download/download.html"/></para>
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426 | </listitem>
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427 | </itemizedlist>
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428 |
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429 | </sect3>
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430 |
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431 | <sect3 role="package">
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432 | <title>Cyclone</title>
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433 |
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434 | <para><application>Cyclone</application> is a programming language based
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435 | on C that is safe, meaning that it rules out programs that have buffer
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436 | overflows, dangling pointers, format string attacks, and so on.
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437 | High-level, type-safe languages, such as Java, Scheme, or ML also provide
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438 | safety, but they don't give the same control over data representations
|
---|
439 | and memory management that C does (witness the fact that the run-time
|
---|
440 | systems for these languages are usually written in C.) Furthermore,
|
---|
441 | porting legacy C code to these languages or interfacing with legacy C
|
---|
442 | libraries is a difficult and error-prone process. The goal of
|
---|
443 | <application>Cyclone</application> is to give programmers the same
|
---|
444 | low-level control and performance of C without sacrificing safety, and to
|
---|
445 | make it easy to port or interface with legacy C code.</para>
|
---|
446 |
|
---|
447 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
448 | <listitem>
|
---|
449 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
450 | url="http://cyclone.thelanguage.org/"/></para>
|
---|
451 | </listitem>
|
---|
452 | <listitem>
|
---|
453 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
454 | url="http://cyclone.thelanguage.org/wiki/Download/"/></para>
|
---|
455 | </listitem>
|
---|
456 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
457 |
|
---|
458 | </sect3>
|
---|
459 |
|
---|
460 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
461 | <title>D</title>
|
---|
462 |
|
---|
463 | <para><application>D</application> is a general purpose systems and
|
---|
464 | applications programming language. It is a higher level language than
|
---|
465 | C++, but retains the ability to write high performance code and interface
|
---|
466 | directly with the operating system APIs and with hardware.
|
---|
467 | <application>D</application> is well suited to writing medium to large
|
---|
468 | scale million line programs with teams of developers. It is easy to
|
---|
469 | learn, provides many capabilities to aid the programmer, and is well
|
---|
470 | suited to aggressive compiler optimization technology.
|
---|
471 | <application>D</application> is not a scripting language, nor an
|
---|
472 | interpreted language. It doesn't come with a VM, a religion, or an
|
---|
473 | overriding philosophy. It's a practical language for practical
|
---|
474 | programmers who need to get the job done quickly, reliably, and leave
|
---|
475 | behind maintainable, easy to understand code.
|
---|
476 | <application>D</application> is the culmination of decades of experience
|
---|
477 | implementing compilers for many diverse languages, and attempting to
|
---|
478 | construct large projects using those languages. It draws inspiration from
|
---|
479 | those other languages (most especially C++) and tempers it with
|
---|
480 | experience and real world practicality.</para>
|
---|
481 |
|
---|
482 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
483 | <listitem>
|
---|
484 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
485 | url="http://www.digitalmars.com/d/"/></para>
|
---|
486 | </listitem>
|
---|
487 | <listitem>
|
---|
488 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
489 | url="ftp://ftp.digitalmars.com/"/></para>
|
---|
490 | </listitem>
|
---|
491 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
492 |
|
---|
493 | </sect3>
|
---|
494 |
|
---|
495 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
496 | <title>DMDScript</title>
|
---|
497 |
|
---|
498 | <para><application>DMDScript</application> is Digital Mars'
|
---|
499 | implementation of the ECMA 262 scripting language. Netscape's
|
---|
500 | implementation is called JavaScript, Microsoft's implementation is
|
---|
501 | called JScript. <application>DMDScript</application> is much faster
|
---|
502 | than other implementations, which you can verify with the included
|
---|
503 | benchmark.</para>
|
---|
504 |
|
---|
505 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
506 | <listitem>
|
---|
507 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
508 | url="http://www.digitalmars.com/dscript/index.html"/></para>
|
---|
509 | </listitem>
|
---|
510 | <listitem>
|
---|
511 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
512 | url="ftp://ftp.digitalmars.com/"/></para>
|
---|
513 | </listitem>
|
---|
514 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
515 |
|
---|
516 | </sect3>
|
---|
517 |
|
---|
518 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
519 | <title>DotGNU Portable.NET</title>
|
---|
520 |
|
---|
521 | <para><application>DotGNU Portable.NET</application> goal is to build a
|
---|
522 | suite of free software tools to build and execute .NET applications,
|
---|
523 | including a C# compiler, assembler, disassembler, and runtime engine.
|
---|
524 | While the initial target platform was GNU/Linux, it is also known to run
|
---|
525 | under Windows, Solaris, NetBSD, FreeBSD, and MacOS X. The runtime engine
|
---|
526 | has been tested on the x86, PowerPC, ARM, Sparc, PARISC, s390, Alpha, and
|
---|
527 | IA-64 processors. <application>DotGNU Portable.NET</application> is part
|
---|
528 | of the DotGNU project, built in accordance with the requirements of the
|
---|
529 | GNU Project. DotGNU Portable.NET is focused on compatibility with the
|
---|
530 | ECMA specifications for CLI. There are other projects under the DotGNU
|
---|
531 | meta-project to build other necessary pieces of infrastructure, and to
|
---|
532 | explore non-CLI approaches to virtual machine implementation.</para>
|
---|
533 |
|
---|
534 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
535 | <listitem>
|
---|
536 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
537 | url="http://www.gnu.org/software/dotgnu/"/></para>
|
---|
538 | </listitem>
|
---|
539 | <listitem>
|
---|
540 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
541 | url="http://www.gnu.org/software/dotgnu/pnet-packages.html"/></para>
|
---|
542 | </listitem>
|
---|
543 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
544 |
|
---|
545 | </sect3>
|
---|
546 |
|
---|
547 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
548 | <title>Dylan</title>
|
---|
549 |
|
---|
550 | <para><application>Dylan</application> is an advanced, object-oriented,
|
---|
551 | dynamic language which supports rapid program development. When needed,
|
---|
552 | programs can be optimized for more efficient execution by supplying more
|
---|
553 | type information to the compiler. Nearly all entities in
|
---|
554 | <application>Dylan</application> (including functions, classes, and basic
|
---|
555 | data types such as integers) are first class objects. Additionally,
|
---|
556 | <application>Dylan</application> supports multiple inheritance,
|
---|
557 | polymorphism, multiple dispatch, keyword arguments, object introspection,
|
---|
558 | macros, and many other advanced features... --Peter Hinely.</para>
|
---|
559 |
|
---|
560 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
561 | <listitem>
|
---|
562 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
563 | url="http://www.opendylan.org/"/></para>
|
---|
564 | </listitem>
|
---|
565 | <listitem>
|
---|
566 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
567 | url="http://www.opendylan.org/downloading.phtml"/></para>
|
---|
568 | </listitem>
|
---|
569 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
570 |
|
---|
571 | </sect3>
|
---|
572 |
|
---|
573 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
574 | <title>E</title>
|
---|
575 |
|
---|
576 | <para><application>E</application> is a secure distributed Java-based
|
---|
577 | pure-object platform and p2p scripting language. It has two parts: ELib
|
---|
578 | and the <application>E</application> Language. Elib provides the stuff
|
---|
579 | that goes on between objects. As a pure-Java library, ELib provides for
|
---|
580 | inter-process capability-secure distributed programming. Its
|
---|
581 | cryptographic capability protocol enables mutually suspicious Java
|
---|
582 | processes to cooperate safely, and its event-loop concurrency and promise
|
---|
583 | pipelining enable high performance deadlock free distributed pure-object
|
---|
584 | computing. The <application>E</application> Language can be used to
|
---|
585 | express what happens within an object. It provides a convenient and
|
---|
586 | familiar notation for the ELib computational model, so you can program
|
---|
587 | in one model rather than two. Under the covers, this notation expands
|
---|
588 | into Kernel-E, a minimalist lambda-language much like Scheme or
|
---|
589 | Smalltalk. Objects written in the <application>E</application> language
|
---|
590 | are only able to interact with other objects according to ELib's
|
---|
591 | semantics, enabling object granularity intra-process security, including
|
---|
592 | the ability to safely run untrusted mobile code (such as caplets).</para>
|
---|
593 |
|
---|
594 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
595 | <listitem>
|
---|
596 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
597 | url="http://www.erights.org/"/></para>
|
---|
598 | </listitem>
|
---|
599 | <listitem>
|
---|
600 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
601 | url="http://www.erights.org/download/"/></para>
|
---|
602 | </listitem>
|
---|
603 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
604 |
|
---|
605 | </sect3>
|
---|
606 |
|
---|
607 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
608 | <title>elastiC</title>
|
---|
609 |
|
---|
610 | <para><application>elastiC</application> is a portable high-level
|
---|
611 | object-oriented interpreted language with a C like syntax. Its main
|
---|
612 | characteristics are: open source, interpreted, has portable bytecode
|
---|
613 | compilation, dynamic typing, automatic real very fast garbage collection,
|
---|
614 | object oriented with meta-programming support (a la Smalltalk),
|
---|
615 | functional programming support (Scheme-like closures with lexical
|
---|
616 | scoping, and eval-like functionality), hierarchical namespaces, a rich
|
---|
617 | set of useful built-in types (dynamic arrays, dictionaries, symbols,
|
---|
618 | ...), extensible with C (you can add functions, types, classes, methods,
|
---|
619 | packages, ...), embeddable in C. <application>elastiC</application> has
|
---|
620 | been strongly influenced by C, Smalltalk, Scheme and Python and tries to
|
---|
621 | merge the best characteristics of all these languages, while still
|
---|
622 | coherently maintaining its unique personality.</para>
|
---|
623 |
|
---|
624 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
625 | <listitem>
|
---|
626 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
627 | url="http://www.elasticworld.org/"/></para>
|
---|
628 | </listitem>
|
---|
629 | <listitem>
|
---|
630 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
631 | url="http://www.elasticworld.org/download.html"/></para>
|
---|
632 | </listitem>
|
---|
633 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
634 |
|
---|
635 | </sect3>
|
---|
636 |
|
---|
637 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
638 | <title>Erlang/OTP</title>
|
---|
639 |
|
---|
640 | <para><application>Erlang/OTP</application> is a development environment
|
---|
641 | based on Erlang. Erlang is a programming language which has many features
|
---|
642 | more commonly associated with an operating system than with a programming
|
---|
643 | language: concurrent processes, scheduling, memory management,
|
---|
644 | distribution, networking, etc. The initial open-source Erlang release
|
---|
645 | contains the implementation of Erlang, as well as a large part of
|
---|
646 | Ericsson's middleware for building distributed high-availability systems.
|
---|
647 | Erlang is characterized by the following features: robustness, soft
|
---|
648 | real-time, hot code upgrades and incremental code loading.</para>
|
---|
649 |
|
---|
650 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
651 | <listitem>
|
---|
652 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
653 | url="http://www.erlang.org/"/></para>
|
---|
654 | </listitem>
|
---|
655 | <listitem>
|
---|
656 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
657 | url="http://www.erlang.org/download.html"/></para>
|
---|
658 | </listitem>
|
---|
659 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
660 |
|
---|
661 | </sect3>
|
---|
662 |
|
---|
663 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
664 | <title>Euphoria</title>
|
---|
665 |
|
---|
666 | <para><application>Euphoria</application> is a simple, flexible, and
|
---|
667 | easy-to-learn programming language. It lets you quickly and easily
|
---|
668 | develop programs for Windows, DOS, Linux and FreeBSD. Euphoria was first
|
---|
669 | released in 1993. Since then Rapid Deployment Software has been steadily
|
---|
670 | improving it with the help of a growing number of enthusiastic users.
|
---|
671 | Although <application>Euphoria</application> provides subscript checking,
|
---|
672 | uninitialized variable checking and numerous other run-time checks, it is
|
---|
673 | extremely fast. People have used it to develop high-speed DOS games,
|
---|
674 | Windows GUI programs, and Linux X Windows programs. It is also very
|
---|
675 | useful for CGI (Web-based) programming.</para>
|
---|
676 |
|
---|
677 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
678 | <listitem>
|
---|
679 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
680 | url="http://www.rapideuphoria.com/"/></para>
|
---|
681 | </listitem>
|
---|
682 | <listitem>
|
---|
683 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
684 | url="http://www.rapideuphoria.com/v20.htm"/></para>
|
---|
685 | </listitem>
|
---|
686 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
687 |
|
---|
688 | </sect3>
|
---|
689 |
|
---|
690 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
691 | <title>Felix</title>
|
---|
692 |
|
---|
693 | <para><application>Felix</application> is an advanced Algol like
|
---|
694 | procedural programming language with a strong functional subsystem. It
|
---|
695 | features ML style static typing, first class functions, pattern matching,
|
---|
696 | garbage collection, polymorphism, and has built in support for high
|
---|
697 | performance microthreading, regular expressions and context free parsing.
|
---|
698 | The system provides a scripting harness so the language can be used like
|
---|
699 | other scripting languages such as Python and Perl, but underneath it
|
---|
700 | generates native code to obtain high performance. A key feature of the
|
---|
701 | system is that it uses the C/C++ object model, and provides an advanced
|
---|
702 | binding sublanguage to support integration with C/C++ at both the source
|
---|
703 | and object levels, both for embedding C/C++ data types and functions into
|
---|
704 | <application>Felix</application>, and for embedding
|
---|
705 | <application>Felix</application> into existing C++ architectures. The
|
---|
706 | <application>Felix</application> compiler is written in Objective Caml,
|
---|
707 | and generates ISO C++ which should compile on any platform.</para>
|
---|
708 |
|
---|
709 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
710 | <listitem>
|
---|
711 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
712 | url="http://felix.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
|
---|
713 | </listitem>
|
---|
714 | <listitem>
|
---|
715 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
716 | url="http://felix-lang.org/web/download.html"/></para>
|
---|
717 | </listitem>
|
---|
718 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
719 |
|
---|
720 | </sect3>
|
---|
721 |
|
---|
722 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
723 | <title>ferite</title>
|
---|
724 |
|
---|
725 | <para><application>ferite</application> is a scripting language and
|
---|
726 | engine all in one manageable chunk. It is designed to be easily extended
|
---|
727 | in terms of API, and to be used within other applications making them
|
---|
728 | more configurable and useful to the end user. It has a syntax similar to
|
---|
729 | a number of other languages but remains clean and its own
|
---|
730 | language.</para>
|
---|
731 |
|
---|
732 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
733 | <listitem>
|
---|
734 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
735 | url="http://www.ferite.org/"/></para>
|
---|
736 | </listitem>
|
---|
737 | <listitem>
|
---|
738 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
739 | url="http://www.ferite.org/download.html"/></para>
|
---|
740 | </listitem>
|
---|
741 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
742 |
|
---|
743 | </sect3>
|
---|
744 |
|
---|
745 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
746 | <title>Forth</title>
|
---|
747 |
|
---|
748 | <para><application>Forth</application> is a stack-based, extensible
|
---|
749 | language without type-checking. It is probably best known for its
|
---|
750 | "reverse Polish" (postfix) arithmetic notation, familiar to users of
|
---|
751 | Hewlett-Packard calculators. <application>Forth</application> is a
|
---|
752 | real-time programming language originally developed to control
|
---|
753 | telescopes. <application>Forth</application> has many unique features
|
---|
754 | and applications: it can compile itself into a new compiler,
|
---|
755 | reverse-polish coding, edit time error checking and compiling (similar
|
---|
756 | to BASIC), extremely efficient thread based language, can be used to
|
---|
757 | debug itself, extensible; thus can become what ever you need it to be.
|
---|
758 | The links below lead to the website of the Forth Interest Group (FIG),
|
---|
759 | a world-wide, non-profit organization for education in and the promotion
|
---|
760 | of the <application>Forth</application> computer language. Another
|
---|
761 | worthwhile website dedicated to the <application>Forth</application>
|
---|
762 | community is <ulink url="http://wiki.forthfreak.net/"/>.</para>
|
---|
763 |
|
---|
764 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
765 | <listitem>
|
---|
766 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
767 | url="http://www.forth.org/"/></para>
|
---|
768 | </listitem>
|
---|
769 | <listitem>
|
---|
770 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
771 | url="http://www.forth.org/compilers.html"/></para>
|
---|
772 | </listitem>
|
---|
773 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
774 |
|
---|
775 | </sect3>
|
---|
776 |
|
---|
777 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
778 | <title>GNU Smalltalk</title>
|
---|
779 |
|
---|
780 | <para><application>GNU Smalltalk</application> is a free implementation
|
---|
781 | of the Smalltalk-80 language which runs on most versions on Unix and, in
|
---|
782 | general, everywhere you can find a POSIX-compliance library. An uncommon
|
---|
783 | feature of it is that it is well-versed to scripting tasks and headless
|
---|
784 | processing. See <ulink
|
---|
785 | url="http://www.gnu.org/software/smalltalk/gst-manual/gst_1.html#SEC1"/>
|
---|
786 | for a more detailed explanation of
|
---|
787 | <application>GNU Smalltalk</application>.</para>
|
---|
788 |
|
---|
789 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
790 | <listitem>
|
---|
791 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
792 | url="http://smalltalk.gnu.org/"/></para>
|
---|
793 | </listitem>
|
---|
794 | <listitem>
|
---|
795 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
796 | url="http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/smalltalk/"/></para>
|
---|
797 | </listitem>
|
---|
798 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
799 |
|
---|
800 | </sect3>
|
---|
801 |
|
---|
802 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
803 | <title>Haskell</title>
|
---|
804 |
|
---|
805 | <para>Haskell is a computer programming language. In particular, it is a
|
---|
806 | polymorphicly typed, lazy, purely functional language, quite different
|
---|
807 | from most other programming languages. The language is named for Haskell
|
---|
808 | Brooks Curry, whose work in mathematical logic serves as a foundation for
|
---|
809 | functional languages. Haskell is based on lambda calculus. There are many
|
---|
810 | implementations of Haskell, among them:</para>
|
---|
811 |
|
---|
812 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
813 | <listitem>
|
---|
814 | <para>GHC: <ulink
|
---|
815 | url="http://www.haskell.org/ghc/"/></para>
|
---|
816 | </listitem>
|
---|
817 | <listitem>
|
---|
818 | <para>HBC: <ulink
|
---|
819 | url="http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~augustss/hbc/hbc.html"/></para>
|
---|
820 | </listitem>
|
---|
821 | <listitem>
|
---|
822 | <para>Helium: <ulink
|
---|
823 | url="http://www.cs.uu.nl/wiki/bin/view/Helium/WebHome"/></para>
|
---|
824 | </listitem>
|
---|
825 | <listitem>
|
---|
826 | <para>Hugs: <ulink
|
---|
827 | url="http://www.haskell.org/hugs/"/></para>
|
---|
828 | </listitem>
|
---|
829 | <listitem>
|
---|
830 | <para>nhc98: <ulink
|
---|
831 | url="http://www.haskell.org/nhc98/"/></para>
|
---|
832 | </listitem>
|
---|
833 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
834 |
|
---|
835 | </sect3>
|
---|
836 |
|
---|
837 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
838 | <title>HLA (High Level Assembly)</title>
|
---|
839 |
|
---|
840 | <para>The <application>HLA</application> language was developed as a tool
|
---|
841 | to help teach assembly language programming and machine organization to
|
---|
842 | University students at the University of California, Riverside. The basic
|
---|
843 | idea was to teach students assembly language programming by leveraging
|
---|
844 | their knowledge of high level languages like C/C++ and Pascal/Delphi. At
|
---|
845 | the same time, <application>HLA</application> was designed to allow
|
---|
846 | advanced assembly language programmers write more readable and more
|
---|
847 | powerful assembly language code.</para>
|
---|
848 |
|
---|
849 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
850 | <listitem>
|
---|
851 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
852 | url="http://www.plantation-productions.com/Webster/HighLevelAsm/index.html"/></para>
|
---|
853 | </listitem>
|
---|
854 | <listitem>
|
---|
855 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
856 | url="http://www.plantation-productions.com/Webster/HighLevelAsm/dnld.html"/></para>
|
---|
857 | </listitem>
|
---|
858 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
859 |
|
---|
860 | </sect3>
|
---|
861 |
|
---|
862 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
863 | <title>Icon</title>
|
---|
864 |
|
---|
865 | <para><application>Icon</application> is a high-level, general-purpose
|
---|
866 | programming language with a large repertoire of features for processing
|
---|
867 | data structures and character strings. It is an imperative, procedural
|
---|
868 | language with a syntax reminiscent of C and Pascal, but with semantics at
|
---|
869 | a much higher level.</para>
|
---|
870 |
|
---|
871 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
872 | <listitem>
|
---|
873 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
874 | url="http://www.cs.arizona.edu/icon/"/></para>
|
---|
875 | </listitem>
|
---|
876 | <listitem>
|
---|
877 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
878 | url="ftp://ftp.cs.arizona.edu/icon/"/></para>
|
---|
879 | </listitem>
|
---|
880 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
881 |
|
---|
882 | </sect3>
|
---|
883 |
|
---|
884 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
885 | <title>Io</title>
|
---|
886 |
|
---|
887 | <para><application>Io</application> is a small, prototype-based
|
---|
888 | programming language. The ideas in <application>Io</application> are
|
---|
889 | mostly inspired by <application>Smalltalk</application> (all values are
|
---|
890 | objects), <application>Self</application> (prototype-based),
|
---|
891 | <application>NewtonScript</application> (differential inheritance),
|
---|
892 | <application>Act1</application> (actors and futures for concurrency),
|
---|
893 | <application>LISP</application> (code is a runtime inspectable/modifiable
|
---|
894 | tree) and <application>Lua</application> (small, embeddable).</para>
|
---|
895 |
|
---|
896 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
897 | <listitem>
|
---|
898 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
899 | url="http://www.iolanguage.com/about/"/></para>
|
---|
900 | </listitem>
|
---|
901 | <listitem>
|
---|
902 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
903 | url="http://www.iolanguage.com/downloads/"/></para>
|
---|
904 | </listitem>
|
---|
905 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
906 |
|
---|
907 | </sect3>
|
---|
908 |
|
---|
909 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
910 | <title>J</title>
|
---|
911 |
|
---|
912 | <para><application>J</application> is a modern, high-level,
|
---|
913 | general-purpose, high-performance programming language. It is portable
|
---|
914 | and runs on Windows, Unix, Mac, and PocketPC handhelds, both as a GUI
|
---|
915 | and in a console. True 64-bit <application>J</application> systems are
|
---|
916 | available for XP64 or Linux64, on AMD64 or Intel EM64T platforms.
|
---|
917 | <application>J</application> systems can be installed and distributed
|
---|
918 | for free.</para>
|
---|
919 |
|
---|
920 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
921 | <listitem>
|
---|
922 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
923 | url="http://www.jsoftware.com/"/></para>
|
---|
924 | </listitem>
|
---|
925 | <listitem>
|
---|
926 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
927 | url="http://www.jsoftware.com/stable.htm"/></para>
|
---|
928 | </listitem>
|
---|
929 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
930 |
|
---|
931 | </sect3>
|
---|
932 |
|
---|
933 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
934 | <title>Jamaica</title>
|
---|
935 |
|
---|
936 | <para><application>Jamaica</application>, the JVM Macro Assembler, is an
|
---|
937 | easy-to-learn and easy-to-use assembly language for JVM bytecode
|
---|
938 | programming. It uses Java syntax to define a JVM class except for the
|
---|
939 | method body that takes bytecode instructions, including
|
---|
940 | <application>Jamaica</application>'s built-in macros. In
|
---|
941 | <application>Jamaica</application>, bytecode instructions use mnemonics
|
---|
942 | and symbolic names for all variables, parameters, data fields, constants
|
---|
943 | and labels.</para>
|
---|
944 |
|
---|
945 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
946 | <listitem>
|
---|
947 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
948 | url="http://judoscript.org/jamaica.html"/></para>
|
---|
949 | </listitem>
|
---|
950 | <listitem>
|
---|
951 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
952 | url="http://judoscript.org/download.html"/></para>
|
---|
953 | </listitem>
|
---|
954 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
955 |
|
---|
956 | </sect3>
|
---|
957 |
|
---|
958 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
959 | <title>Joy</title>
|
---|
960 |
|
---|
961 | <para><application>Joy</application> is a purely functional programming
|
---|
962 | language. Whereas all other functional programming languages are based on
|
---|
963 | the application of functions to arguments, <application>Joy</application>
|
---|
964 | is based on the composition of functions. All such functions take a stack
|
---|
965 | as an argument and produce a stack as a value. Consequently much of
|
---|
966 | <application>Joy</application> looks like ordinary postfix notation.
|
---|
967 | However, in <application>Joy</application> a function can consume any
|
---|
968 | number of parameters from the stack and leave any number of results on
|
---|
969 | the stack. The concatenation of appropriate programs denotes the
|
---|
970 | composition of the functions which the programs denote.</para>
|
---|
971 |
|
---|
972 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
973 | <listitem>
|
---|
974 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
975 | url="http://www.latrobe.edu.au/phimvt/joy.html"/></para>
|
---|
976 | </listitem>
|
---|
977 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
978 |
|
---|
979 | </sect3>
|
---|
980 |
|
---|
981 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
982 | <title>Judo</title>
|
---|
983 |
|
---|
984 | <para><application>Judo</application> is a practical, functional
|
---|
985 | scripting language. It is designed to cover the use cases of not only
|
---|
986 | algorithmic/object-oriented/multi-threaded programming and Java scripting
|
---|
987 | but also a number of major application domain tasks, such as scripting
|
---|
988 | for JDBC, WSDL, ActiveX, OS, multiple file/data formats, etc. Despite its
|
---|
989 | rich functionality, the base language is extremely simple, and domain
|
---|
990 | support syntax is totally intuitive to domain experts, so that even
|
---|
991 | though you have never programmed in <application>Judo</application>, you
|
---|
992 | would have little trouble figuring out what the code does.</para>
|
---|
993 |
|
---|
994 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
995 | <listitem>
|
---|
996 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
997 | url="http://judoscript.org/home.html"/></para>
|
---|
998 | </listitem>
|
---|
999 | <listitem>
|
---|
1000 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1001 | url="http://judoscript.org/download.html"/></para>
|
---|
1002 | </listitem>
|
---|
1003 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1004 |
|
---|
1005 | </sect3>
|
---|
1006 |
|
---|
1007 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1008 | <title>JWIG</title>
|
---|
1009 |
|
---|
1010 | <para><application>JWIG</application> is a Java-based high-level
|
---|
1011 | programming language for development of interactive Web services. It
|
---|
1012 | contains an advanced session model, a flexible mechanism for dynamic
|
---|
1013 | construction of XML documents, in particular XHTML, and a powerful API
|
---|
1014 | for simplifying use of the HTTP protocol and many other aspects of Web
|
---|
1015 | service programming. To support program development,
|
---|
1016 | <application>JWIG</application> provides a unique suite of highly
|
---|
1017 | specialized program analysers that at compile time verify for a given
|
---|
1018 | program that no runtime errors can occur while building documents or
|
---|
1019 | receiving form input, and that all documents being shown are valid
|
---|
1020 | according to the document type definition for XHTML 1.0. The main goal of
|
---|
1021 | the <application>JWIG</application> project is to simplify development of
|
---|
1022 | complex Web services, compared to alternatives, such as, Servlets, JSP,
|
---|
1023 | ASP, and PHP. <application>JWIG</application> is a descendant of the
|
---|
1024 | <application><bigwig></application> research language.</para>
|
---|
1025 |
|
---|
1026 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1027 | <listitem>
|
---|
1028 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1029 | url="http://www.brics.dk/JWIG/"/></para>
|
---|
1030 | </listitem>
|
---|
1031 | <listitem>
|
---|
1032 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1033 | url="http://www.brics.dk/JWIG/download.html"/></para>
|
---|
1034 | </listitem>
|
---|
1035 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1036 |
|
---|
1037 | </sect3>
|
---|
1038 |
|
---|
1039 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1040 | <title>Lava</title>
|
---|
1041 |
|
---|
1042 | <para><application>Lava</application> is a name unfortunately chosen for
|
---|
1043 | several unrelated software development languages/projects. So it doesn't
|
---|
1044 | appear as though BLFS has a preference for one over another, the project
|
---|
1045 | web sites are listed below, without descriptions of the capabilities or
|
---|
1046 | features for any of them.</para>
|
---|
1047 |
|
---|
1048 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1049 | <listitem>
|
---|
1050 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1051 | url="http://lavape.sourceforge.net/index.htm"/></para>
|
---|
1052 | </listitem>
|
---|
1053 | <listitem>
|
---|
1054 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1055 | url="http://javalab.cs.uni-bonn.de/research/darwin/#The%20Lava%20Language"/></para>
|
---|
1056 | </listitem>
|
---|
1057 | <listitem>
|
---|
1058 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1059 | url="http://mathias.tripod.com/IavaHomepage.html"/></para>
|
---|
1060 | </listitem>
|
---|
1061 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1062 |
|
---|
1063 | </sect3>
|
---|
1064 |
|
---|
1065 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1066 | <title>Lua</title>
|
---|
1067 |
|
---|
1068 | <para><application>Lua</application> is a powerful light-weight
|
---|
1069 | programming language designed for extending applications. It is also
|
---|
1070 | frequently used as a general-purpose, stand-alone language. It is free
|
---|
1071 | software. <application>Lua</application> combines simple procedural
|
---|
1072 | syntax with powerful data description constructs based on associative
|
---|
1073 | arrays and extensible semantics. It is dynamically typed, interpreted
|
---|
1074 | from bytecodes, and has automatic memory management with garbage
|
---|
1075 | collection, making it ideal for configuration, scripting, and rapid
|
---|
1076 | prototyping. A fundamental concept in the design of
|
---|
1077 | <application>Lua</application> is to provide meta-mechanisms for
|
---|
1078 | implementing features, instead of providing a host of features directly
|
---|
1079 | in the language. For example, although <application>Lua</application> is
|
---|
1080 | not a pure object-oriented language, it does provide meta-mechanisms for
|
---|
1081 | implementing classes and inheritance. <application>Lua</application>'s
|
---|
1082 | meta-mechanisms bring an economy of concepts and keep the language small,
|
---|
1083 | while allowing the semantics to be extended in unconventional ways.
|
---|
1084 | Extensible semantics is a distinguishing feature of
|
---|
1085 | <application>Lua</application>. <application>Lua</application> is a
|
---|
1086 | language engine that you can embed into your application. This means
|
---|
1087 | that, besides syntax and semantics, it has an API that allows the
|
---|
1088 | application to exchange data with <application>Lua</application> programs
|
---|
1089 | and also to extend <application>Lua</application> with C functions. In
|
---|
1090 | this sense, it can be regarded as a language framework for building
|
---|
1091 | domain-specific languages. <application>Lua</application> is implemented
|
---|
1092 | as a small library of C functions, written in ANSI C, and compiles
|
---|
1093 | unmodified in all known platforms. The implementation goals are
|
---|
1094 | simplicity, efficiency, portability, and low embedding cost. The result
|
---|
1095 | is a fast language engine with small footprint, making it ideal in
|
---|
1096 | embedded systems too.</para>
|
---|
1097 |
|
---|
1098 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1099 | <listitem>
|
---|
1100 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1101 | url="http://www.lua.org/"/></para>
|
---|
1102 | </listitem>
|
---|
1103 | <listitem>
|
---|
1104 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1105 | url="http://www.lua.org/download.html"/></para>
|
---|
1106 | </listitem>
|
---|
1107 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1108 |
|
---|
1109 | </sect3>
|
---|
1110 |
|
---|
1111 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1112 | <title>Mercury</title>
|
---|
1113 |
|
---|
1114 | <para><application>Mercury</application> is a new logic/functional
|
---|
1115 | programming language, which combines the clarity and expressiveness of
|
---|
1116 | declarative programming with advanced static analysis and error detection
|
---|
1117 | features. Its highly optimized execution algorithm delivers efficiency
|
---|
1118 | far in excess of existing logic programming systems, and close to
|
---|
1119 | conventional programming systems. <application>Mercury</application>
|
---|
1120 | addresses the problems of large-scale program development, allowing
|
---|
1121 | modularity, separate compilation, and numerous optimization/time
|
---|
1122 | trade-offs.</para>
|
---|
1123 |
|
---|
1124 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1125 | <listitem>
|
---|
1126 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1127 | url="http://www.mercury.csse.unimelb.edu.au/"/></para>
|
---|
1128 | </listitem>
|
---|
1129 | <listitem>
|
---|
1130 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1131 | url="http://www.mercury.csse.unimelb.edu.au/download.html"/></para>
|
---|
1132 | </listitem>
|
---|
1133 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1134 |
|
---|
1135 | </sect3>
|
---|
1136 |
|
---|
1137 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1138 | <title>Mono</title>
|
---|
1139 |
|
---|
1140 | <para><application>Mono</application> provides the necessary software to
|
---|
1141 | develop and run .NET client and server applications on Linux, Solaris,
|
---|
1142 | Mac OS X, Windows, and Unix. Sponsored by Novell, the
|
---|
1143 | <application>Mono</application> open source project has an active and
|
---|
1144 | enthusiastic contributing community and is positioned to become the
|
---|
1145 | leading choice for development of Linux applications.</para>
|
---|
1146 |
|
---|
1147 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1148 | <listitem>
|
---|
1149 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1150 | url="http://www.mono-project.com/Main_Page"/></para>
|
---|
1151 | </listitem>
|
---|
1152 | <listitem>
|
---|
1153 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1154 | url="http://ftp.novell.com/pub/mono/archive/"/></para>
|
---|
1155 | </listitem>
|
---|
1156 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1157 |
|
---|
1158 | </sect3>
|
---|
1159 |
|
---|
1160 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1161 | <title>MPD</title>
|
---|
1162 |
|
---|
1163 | <para><application>MPD</application> is a variant of the
|
---|
1164 | <application>SR</application> programming language.
|
---|
1165 | <application>SR</application> has a Pascal-like syntax and uses guarded
|
---|
1166 | commands for control statements. <application>MPD</application> has a
|
---|
1167 | C-like syntax and C-like control statements. However, the main components
|
---|
1168 | of the two languages are the same: resources, globals, operations, procs,
|
---|
1169 | procedures, processes, and virtual machines. Moreover,
|
---|
1170 | <application>MPD</application> supports the same variety of concurrent
|
---|
1171 | programming mechanisms as <application>SR</application>: co statements,
|
---|
1172 | semaphores, call/send/forward invocations, and receive and input
|
---|
1173 | statements.</para>
|
---|
1174 |
|
---|
1175 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1176 | <listitem>
|
---|
1177 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1178 | url="http://www.cs.arizona.edu/mpd/"/></para>
|
---|
1179 | </listitem>
|
---|
1180 | <listitem>
|
---|
1181 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1182 | url="http://www.cs.arizona.edu/mpd/download/"/></para>
|
---|
1183 | </listitem>
|
---|
1184 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1185 |
|
---|
1186 | </sect3>
|
---|
1187 |
|
---|
1188 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1189 | <title>Nemerle</title>
|
---|
1190 |
|
---|
1191 | <para><application>Nemerle</application> is a high-level statically-typed
|
---|
1192 | programming language for the .NET platform. It offers functional,
|
---|
1193 | object-oriented and imperative features. It has a simple C#-like syntax
|
---|
1194 | and a powerful meta-programming system. Features that come from the
|
---|
1195 | functional land are variants, pattern matching, type inference and
|
---|
1196 | parameter polymorphism (aka generics). The meta-programming system allows
|
---|
1197 | great compiler extensibility, embedding domain specific languages,
|
---|
1198 | partial evaluation and aspect-oriented programming.</para>
|
---|
1199 |
|
---|
1200 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1201 | <listitem>
|
---|
1202 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1203 | url="http://nemerle.org/Main_Page"/></para>
|
---|
1204 | </listitem>
|
---|
1205 | <listitem>
|
---|
1206 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1207 | url="http://nemerle.org/Download"/></para>
|
---|
1208 | </listitem>
|
---|
1209 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1210 |
|
---|
1211 | </sect3>
|
---|
1212 |
|
---|
1213 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1214 | <title>Octave</title>
|
---|
1215 |
|
---|
1216 | <para>GNU <application>Octave</application> is a high-level language,
|
---|
1217 | primarily intended for numerical computations. It provides a convenient
|
---|
1218 | command line interface for solving linear and nonlinear problems
|
---|
1219 | numerically, and for performing other numerical experiments using a
|
---|
1220 | language that is mostly compatible with Matlab. It may also be used as
|
---|
1221 | a batch-oriented language. <application>Octave</application> has
|
---|
1222 | extensive tools for solving common numerical linear algebra problems,
|
---|
1223 | finding the roots of nonlinear equations, integrating ordinary functions,
|
---|
1224 | manipulating polynomials, and integrating ordinary differential and
|
---|
1225 | differential-algebraic equations. It is easily extensible and
|
---|
1226 | customizable via user-defined functions written in
|
---|
1227 | <application>Octave</application>'s own language, or using dynamically
|
---|
1228 | loaded modules written in C++, C, Fortran, or other languages.</para>
|
---|
1229 |
|
---|
1230 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1231 | <listitem>
|
---|
1232 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1233 | url="http://www.gnu.org/software/octave/"/></para>
|
---|
1234 | </listitem>
|
---|
1235 | <listitem>
|
---|
1236 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1237 | url="http://www.gnu.org/software/octave/download.html"/></para>
|
---|
1238 | </listitem>
|
---|
1239 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1240 |
|
---|
1241 | </sect3>
|
---|
1242 |
|
---|
1243 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1244 | <title>OO2C (Optimizing Oberon-2 Compiler)</title>
|
---|
1245 |
|
---|
1246 | <para><application>OO2C</application> is an Oberon-2 development
|
---|
1247 | platform. It consists of an optimizing compiler, a number of related
|
---|
1248 | tools, a set of standard library modules and a reference manual.
|
---|
1249 | Oberon-2 is a general-purpose programming language in the tradition of
|
---|
1250 | Pascal and Modula-2. Its most important features are block structure,
|
---|
1251 | modularity, separate compilation, static typing with strong type checking
|
---|
1252 | (also across module boundaries) and type extension with type-bound
|
---|
1253 | procedures. Type extension makes Oberon-2 an object-oriented
|
---|
1254 | language.</para>
|
---|
1255 |
|
---|
1256 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1257 | <listitem>
|
---|
1258 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1259 | url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/ooc/"/></para>
|
---|
1260 | </listitem>
|
---|
1261 | <listitem>
|
---|
1262 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1263 | url="&sourceforge-repo;/ooc/"/></para>
|
---|
1264 | </listitem>
|
---|
1265 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1266 |
|
---|
1267 | </sect3>
|
---|
1268 |
|
---|
1269 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1270 | <title>Ordered Graph Data Language (OGDL)</title>
|
---|
1271 |
|
---|
1272 | <para><application>OGDL</application> is a structured textual format that
|
---|
1273 | represents information in the form of graphs, where the nodes are strings
|
---|
1274 | and the arcs or edges are spaces or indentation.</para>
|
---|
1275 |
|
---|
1276 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1277 | <listitem>
|
---|
1278 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1279 | url="http://ogdl.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
|
---|
1280 | </listitem>
|
---|
1281 | <listitem>
|
---|
1282 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1283 | url="&sourceforge-repo;/ogdl/"/></para>
|
---|
1284 | </listitem>
|
---|
1285 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1286 |
|
---|
1287 | </sect3>
|
---|
1288 |
|
---|
1289 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1290 | <title>Pike</title>
|
---|
1291 |
|
---|
1292 | <para><application>Pike</application> is a dynamic programming language
|
---|
1293 | with a syntax similar to Java and C. It is simple to learn, does not
|
---|
1294 | require long compilation passes and has powerful built-in data types
|
---|
1295 | allowing simple and really fast data manipulation. Pike is released under
|
---|
1296 | the GNU GPL, GNU LGPL and MPL.</para>
|
---|
1297 |
|
---|
1298 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1299 | <listitem>
|
---|
1300 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1301 | url="http://pike.ida.liu.se/"/></para>
|
---|
1302 | </listitem>
|
---|
1303 | <listitem>
|
---|
1304 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1305 | url="http://pike.ida.liu.se/download/pub/pike"/></para>
|
---|
1306 | </listitem>
|
---|
1307 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1308 |
|
---|
1309 | </sect3>
|
---|
1310 | <!-- Broken link
|
---|
1311 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1312 | <title>pyc</title>
|
---|
1313 |
|
---|
1314 | <para><application>pyc</application> is a compiler that compiles
|
---|
1315 | <application>Python</application> source code to bytecode (from
|
---|
1316 | <filename class='extension'>.py</filename> to
|
---|
1317 | <filename class='extension'>.pyc</filename>), written entirely in
|
---|
1318 | <application>Python</application> (based on code from the <quote>compiler
|
---|
1319 | package</quote>). It can compile itself and pass a 3-stage bootstrap.
|
---|
1320 | <application>pyc</application> performs advanced optimizations which
|
---|
1321 | results in better (smaller) bytecode.</para>
|
---|
1322 |
|
---|
1323 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1324 | <listitem>
|
---|
1325 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1326 | url="http://students.ceid.upatras.gr/~sxanth/pyc/"/></para>
|
---|
1327 | </listitem>
|
---|
1328 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1329 |
|
---|
1330 | </sect3>
|
---|
1331 | -->
|
---|
1332 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1333 | <title>Pyrex</title>
|
---|
1334 |
|
---|
1335 | <para><application>Pyrex</application> is a language specially designed
|
---|
1336 | for writing Python extension modules. It's designed to bridge the gap
|
---|
1337 | between the nice, high-level, easy-to-use world of
|
---|
1338 | <application>Python</application> and the messy, low-level world of C.
|
---|
1339 | <application>Pyrex</application> lets you write code that mixes
|
---|
1340 | <application>Python</application> and C data types any way you want, and
|
---|
1341 | compiles it into a C extension for
|
---|
1342 | <application>Python</application>.</para>
|
---|
1343 |
|
---|
1344 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1345 | <listitem>
|
---|
1346 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1347 | url="http://www.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/greg.ewing/python/Pyrex/"/></para>
|
---|
1348 | </listitem>
|
---|
1349 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1350 |
|
---|
1351 | </sect3>
|
---|
1352 |
|
---|
1353 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1354 | <title>Q</title>
|
---|
1355 |
|
---|
1356 | <para><application>Q</application> is a functional programming language
|
---|
1357 | based on term rewriting. Thus, a <application>Q</application> program or
|
---|
1358 | <quote>script</quote> is simply a collection of equations which are used
|
---|
1359 | to evaluate expressions in a symbolic fashion. The equations establish
|
---|
1360 | algebraic identities and are interpreted as rewriting rules in order to
|
---|
1361 | reduce expressions to <quote>normal forms</quote>.</para>
|
---|
1362 |
|
---|
1363 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1364 | <listitem>
|
---|
1365 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1366 | url="http://q-lang.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
|
---|
1367 | </listitem>
|
---|
1368 | <listitem>
|
---|
1369 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1370 | url="&sourceforge-repo;/q-lang/"/></para>
|
---|
1371 | </listitem>
|
---|
1372 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1373 |
|
---|
1374 | </sect3>
|
---|
1375 |
|
---|
1376 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1377 | <title>R</title>
|
---|
1378 |
|
---|
1379 | <para><application>R</application> is a language and environment for
|
---|
1380 | statistical computing and graphics. It is a GNU project similar to the
|
---|
1381 | <application>S</application> language and environment which was developed
|
---|
1382 | at Bell Laboratories (formerly AT&T, now Lucent Technologies) by
|
---|
1383 | John Chambers and colleagues. <application>R</application> can be
|
---|
1384 | considered as a different implementation of <application>S</application>.
|
---|
1385 | There are some important differences, but much code written for
|
---|
1386 | <application>S</application> runs unaltered under
|
---|
1387 | <application>R</application>. <application>R</application> provides a
|
---|
1388 | wide variety of statistical (linear and nonlinear modelling, classical
|
---|
1389 | statistical tests, time-series analysis, classification, clustering, ...)
|
---|
1390 | and graphical techniques, and is highly extensible. The
|
---|
1391 | <application>S</application> language is often the vehicle of choice for
|
---|
1392 | research in statistical methodology, and <application>R</application>
|
---|
1393 | provides an Open Source route to participation in that activity.</para>
|
---|
1394 |
|
---|
1395 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1396 | <listitem>
|
---|
1397 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1398 | url="http://www.r-project.org/"/></para>
|
---|
1399 | </listitem>
|
---|
1400 | <listitem>
|
---|
1401 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1402 | url="http://cran.r-project.org/mirrors.html"/></para>
|
---|
1403 | </listitem>
|
---|
1404 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1405 |
|
---|
1406 | </sect3>
|
---|
1407 |
|
---|
1408 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1409 | <title>Regina Rexx</title>
|
---|
1410 |
|
---|
1411 | <para><application>Regina</application> is a Rexx interpreter that has
|
---|
1412 | been ported to most Unix platforms (Linux, FreeBSD, Solaris, AIX, HP-UX,
|
---|
1413 | etc.) and also to OS/2, eCS, DOS, Win9x/Me/NT/2k/XP, Amiga, AROS, QNX4.x,
|
---|
1414 | QNX6.x BeOS, MacOS X, EPOC32, AtheOS, OpenVMS, SkyOS and OpenEdition.
|
---|
1415 | Rexx is a programming language that was designed to be easy to use for
|
---|
1416 | inexperienced programmers yet powerful enough for experienced users. It
|
---|
1417 | is also a language ideally suited as a macro language for other
|
---|
1418 | applications.</para>
|
---|
1419 |
|
---|
1420 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1421 | <listitem>
|
---|
1422 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1423 | url="http://regina-rexx.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
|
---|
1424 | </listitem>
|
---|
1425 | <listitem>
|
---|
1426 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1427 | url="&sourceforge-repo;/regina-rexx"/></para>
|
---|
1428 | </listitem>
|
---|
1429 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1430 |
|
---|
1431 | </sect3>
|
---|
1432 |
|
---|
1433 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1434 | <title>Serp</title>
|
---|
1435 |
|
---|
1436 | <para><application>Serp</application> is an open source framework for
|
---|
1437 | manipulating Java bytecode. The goal of the
|
---|
1438 | <application>Serp</application> bytecode framework is to tap the full
|
---|
1439 | power of bytecode modification while lowering its associated costs. The
|
---|
1440 | framework provides a set of high-level APIs for manipulating all aspects
|
---|
1441 | of bytecode, from large-scale structures like class member fields to the
|
---|
1442 | individual instructions that comprise the code of methods. While in order
|
---|
1443 | to perform any advanced manipulation, some understanding of the class
|
---|
1444 | file format and especially of the JVM instruction set is necessary, the
|
---|
1445 | framework makes it as easy as possible to enter the world of bytecode
|
---|
1446 | development.</para>
|
---|
1447 |
|
---|
1448 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1449 | <listitem>
|
---|
1450 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1451 | url="http://serp.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
|
---|
1452 | </listitem>
|
---|
1453 | <listitem>
|
---|
1454 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1455 | url="http://serp.sourceforge.net/files/"/></para>
|
---|
1456 | </listitem>
|
---|
1457 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1458 |
|
---|
1459 | </sect3>
|
---|
1460 |
|
---|
1461 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1462 | <title>Small Device C Compiler (SDCC)</title>
|
---|
1463 |
|
---|
1464 | <para><application>SDCC</application> is a Freeware, retargetable,
|
---|
1465 | optimizing ANSI-C compiler that targets the Intel 8051, Maxim 80DS390
|
---|
1466 | and the Zilog Z80 based MCUs. Work is in progress on supporting the
|
---|
1467 | Motorola 68HC08 as well as Microchip PIC16 and PIC18 series. The entire
|
---|
1468 | source code for the compiler is distributed under GPL.</para>
|
---|
1469 |
|
---|
1470 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1471 | <listitem>
|
---|
1472 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1473 | url="http://sdcc.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
|
---|
1474 | </listitem>
|
---|
1475 | <listitem>
|
---|
1476 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1477 | url="http://sdcc.sourceforge.net/snap.php#Source"/></para>
|
---|
1478 | </listitem>
|
---|
1479 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1480 |
|
---|
1481 | </sect3>
|
---|
1482 |
|
---|
1483 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1484 | <title>SmartEiffel (The GNU Eiffel Compiler)</title>
|
---|
1485 |
|
---|
1486 | <para><application>SmartEiffel</application> claims to be <quote>the
|
---|
1487 | fastest and the slimmest multi-platform Eiffel compiler on Earth</quote>.
|
---|
1488 | Eiffel is an object-oriented programming language which emphasizes the
|
---|
1489 | production of robust software. Its syntax is keyword-oriented in the
|
---|
1490 | ALGOL and Pascal tradition. Eiffel is strongly statically typed, with
|
---|
1491 | automatic memory management (typically implemented by garbage
|
---|
1492 | collection). Distinguishing characteristics of Eiffel include Design by
|
---|
1493 | contract (DbC), liberal use of inheritance including multiple
|
---|
1494 | inheritance, a type system handling both value and reference semantics,
|
---|
1495 | and generic classes. Eiffel has a unified type system—all types in
|
---|
1496 | Eiffel are classes, so it is possible to create subclasses of the basic
|
---|
1497 | classes such as INTEGER. Eiffel has operator overloading, including the
|
---|
1498 | ability to define new operators, but does not have method
|
---|
1499 | overloading.</para>
|
---|
1500 |
|
---|
1501 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1502 | <listitem>
|
---|
1503 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1504 | url="http://smarteiffel.loria.fr/"/></para>
|
---|
1505 | </listitem>
|
---|
1506 | <listitem>
|
---|
1507 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1508 | url="ftp://ftp.cs.rit.edu/pub/mirrors/SmartEiffel/"/></para>
|
---|
1509 | </listitem>
|
---|
1510 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1511 |
|
---|
1512 | </sect3>
|
---|
1513 |
|
---|
1514 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1515 | <title>Squeak</title>
|
---|
1516 |
|
---|
1517 | <para><application>Squeak</application> is an open, highly-portable
|
---|
1518 | Smalltalk implementation whose virtual machine is written entirely in
|
---|
1519 | Smalltalk, making it easy to debug, analyze, and change. To achieve
|
---|
1520 | practical performance, a translator produces an equivalent C program
|
---|
1521 | whose performance is comparable to commercial Smalltalks. Other
|
---|
1522 | noteworthy aspects of <application>Squeak</application> include:
|
---|
1523 | real-time sound and music synthesis written entirely in Smalltalk,
|
---|
1524 | extensions of BitBlt to handle color of any depth and anti-aliased
|
---|
1525 | image rotation and scaling, network access support that allows simple
|
---|
1526 | construction of servers and other useful facilities, it runs
|
---|
1527 | bit-identical on many platforms (Windows, Mac, Unix, and others), a
|
---|
1528 | compact object format that typically requires only a single word of
|
---|
1529 | overhead per object and a simple yet efficient incremental garbage
|
---|
1530 | collector for 32-bit direct pointers efficient bulk-mutation of
|
---|
1531 | objects.</para>
|
---|
1532 |
|
---|
1533 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1534 | <listitem>
|
---|
1535 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1536 | url="http://www.squeak.org/"/></para>
|
---|
1537 | </listitem>
|
---|
1538 | <listitem>
|
---|
1539 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1540 | url="http://www.squeak.org/Download/"/></para>
|
---|
1541 | </listitem>
|
---|
1542 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1543 |
|
---|
1544 | </sect3>
|
---|
1545 |
|
---|
1546 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1547 | <title>SR (Synchronizing Resources)</title>
|
---|
1548 |
|
---|
1549 | <para><application>SR</application> is a language for writing concurrent
|
---|
1550 | programs. The main language constructs are resources and operations.
|
---|
1551 | Resources encapsulate processes and variables they share; operations
|
---|
1552 | provide the primary mechanism for process interaction.
|
---|
1553 | <application>SR</application> provides a novel integration of the
|
---|
1554 | mechanisms for invoking and servicing operations. Consequently, all of
|
---|
1555 | local and remote procedure call, rendezvous, message passing, dynamic
|
---|
1556 | process creation, multicast, and semaphores are supported.
|
---|
1557 | <application>SR</application> also supports shared global variables and
|
---|
1558 | operations.</para>
|
---|
1559 |
|
---|
1560 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1561 | <listitem>
|
---|
1562 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1563 | url="http://www.cs.arizona.edu/sr/index.html"/></para>
|
---|
1564 | </listitem>
|
---|
1565 | <listitem>
|
---|
1566 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1567 | url="ftp://ftp.cs.arizona.edu/sr/"/></para>
|
---|
1568 | </listitem>
|
---|
1569 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1570 |
|
---|
1571 | </sect3>
|
---|
1572 |
|
---|
1573 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1574 | <title>Standard ML</title>
|
---|
1575 |
|
---|
1576 | <para>Standard ML is a safe, modular, strict, functional, polymorphic
|
---|
1577 | programming language with compile-time type checking and type inference,
|
---|
1578 | garbage collection, exception handling, immutable data types and
|
---|
1579 | updatable references, abstract data types, and parametric modules. It has
|
---|
1580 | efficient implementations and a formal definition with a proof of
|
---|
1581 | soundness. There are many implementations of Standard ML, among them:</para>
|
---|
1582 |
|
---|
1583 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1584 | <listitem>
|
---|
1585 | <para>ML Kit: <ulink
|
---|
1586 | url="http://www.it-c.dk/research/mlkit/"/></para>
|
---|
1587 | </listitem>
|
---|
1588 | <listitem>
|
---|
1589 | <para>MLton: <ulink
|
---|
1590 | url="http://mlton.org/"/></para>
|
---|
1591 | </listitem>
|
---|
1592 | <listitem>
|
---|
1593 | <para>Moscow ML: <ulink
|
---|
1594 | url="http://www.dina.kvl.dk/~sestoft/mosml.html"/></para>
|
---|
1595 | </listitem>
|
---|
1596 | <listitem>
|
---|
1597 | <para>Poly/ML: <ulink
|
---|
1598 | url="http://www.polyml.org/"/></para>
|
---|
1599 | </listitem>
|
---|
1600 | <listitem>
|
---|
1601 | <para>Standard ML of New Jersey: <ulink
|
---|
1602 | url="http://www.smlnj.org/"/></para>
|
---|
1603 | </listitem>
|
---|
1604 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1605 |
|
---|
1606 | </sect3>
|
---|
1607 |
|
---|
1608 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1609 | <title>Steel Bank Common Lisp (SBCL)</title>
|
---|
1610 |
|
---|
1611 | <para><application>SBCL</application> is an open source (free software)
|
---|
1612 | compiler and runtime system for ANSI Common Lisp. It provides an
|
---|
1613 | interactive environment including an integrated native compiler, a
|
---|
1614 | debugger, and many extensions. <application>SBCL</application> runs on a
|
---|
1615 | number of platforms.</para>
|
---|
1616 |
|
---|
1617 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1618 | <listitem>
|
---|
1619 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1620 | url="http://www.sbcl.org/"/></para>
|
---|
1621 | </listitem>
|
---|
1622 | <listitem>
|
---|
1623 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1624 | url="&sourceforge-repo;/sbcl/"/></para>
|
---|
1625 | </listitem>
|
---|
1626 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1627 |
|
---|
1628 | </sect3>
|
---|
1629 |
|
---|
1630 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1631 | <title>Tiny C Compiler (TCC)</title>
|
---|
1632 |
|
---|
1633 | <para><application>Tiny C Compiler</application> is a small C compiler
|
---|
1634 | that can be used to compile and execute C code everywhere, for example
|
---|
1635 | on rescue disks (about 100KB for x86 TCC executable, including C
|
---|
1636 | preprocessor, C compiler, assembler and linker).
|
---|
1637 | <application>TCC</application> is fast. It generates optimized x86 code,
|
---|
1638 | has no byte code overhead and compiles, assembles and links several times
|
---|
1639 | faster than <application>GCC</application>.
|
---|
1640 | <application>TCC</application> is versatile, any C dynamic library can be
|
---|
1641 | used directly. It is heading toward full ISOC99 compliance and can
|
---|
1642 | compile itself. The compiler is safe as it includes an optional memory
|
---|
1643 | and bound checker. Bound checked code can be mixed freely with standard
|
---|
1644 | code. <application>TCC</application> compiles and executes C source
|
---|
1645 | directly. No linking or assembly necessary. A full C preprocessor and
|
---|
1646 | GNU-like assembler is included. It is C script supported; just add
|
---|
1647 | <quote>#!/usr/local/bin/tcc -run</quote> on the first line of your C
|
---|
1648 | source, and execute it directly from the command line. With libtcc, you
|
---|
1649 | can use <application>TCC</application> as a backend for dynamic code
|
---|
1650 | generation.</para>
|
---|
1651 |
|
---|
1652 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1653 | <listitem>
|
---|
1654 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1655 | url="http://bellard.org/tcc/"/></para>
|
---|
1656 | </listitem>
|
---|
1657 | <listitem>
|
---|
1658 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1659 | url="http://download.savannah.gnu.org/releases-noredirect/tinycc/"/></para>
|
---|
1660 | </listitem>
|
---|
1661 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1662 |
|
---|
1663 | </sect3>
|
---|
1664 |
|
---|
1665 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1666 | <title>TinyCOBOL</title>
|
---|
1667 |
|
---|
1668 | <para><application>TinyCOBOL</application> is a COBOL compiler being
|
---|
1669 | developed by members of the free software community. The mission is to
|
---|
1670 | produce a COBOL compiler based on the COBOL 85 standards.
|
---|
1671 | <application>TinyCOBOL</application> is available for the Intel
|
---|
1672 | architecture (IA32) and compatible processors on the following platforms:
|
---|
1673 | BeOS, FreeBSD, Linux and MinGW on Windows.</para>
|
---|
1674 |
|
---|
1675 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1676 | <listitem>
|
---|
1677 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1678 | url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/tiny-cobol/"/></para>
|
---|
1679 | </listitem>
|
---|
1680 | <listitem>
|
---|
1681 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1682 | url="&sourceforge-repo;/tiny-cobol/"/></para>
|
---|
1683 | </listitem>
|
---|
1684 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1685 |
|
---|
1686 | </sect3>
|
---|
1687 |
|
---|
1688 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1689 | <title>Yorick</title>
|
---|
1690 |
|
---|
1691 | <para><application>Yorick</application> is an interpreted programming
|
---|
1692 | language, designed for postprocessing or steering large scientific
|
---|
1693 | simulation codes. Smaller scientific simulations or calculations, such as
|
---|
1694 | the flow past an airfoil or the motion of a drumhead, can be written as
|
---|
1695 | standalone yorick programs. The language features a compact syntax for
|
---|
1696 | many common array operations, so it processes large arrays of numbers
|
---|
1697 | very efficiently. Unlike most interpreters, which are several hundred
|
---|
1698 | times slower than compiled code for number crunching,
|
---|
1699 | <application>Yorick</application> can approach to within a factor of four
|
---|
1700 | or five of compiled speed for many common tasks. Superficially,
|
---|
1701 | <application>Yorick</application> code resembles C code, but
|
---|
1702 | <application>Yorick</application> variables are never explicitly declared
|
---|
1703 | and have a dynamic scoping similar to many Lisp dialects. The
|
---|
1704 | <quote>unofficial</quote> home page for <application>Yorick</application>
|
---|
1705 | can be found at <ulink url="http://www.maumae.net/yorick"/>.</para>
|
---|
1706 |
|
---|
1707 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1708 | <listitem>
|
---|
1709 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1710 | url="http://yorick.sourceforge.net/index.php"/></para>
|
---|
1711 | </listitem>
|
---|
1712 | <listitem>
|
---|
1713 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1714 | url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/yorick/files/"/></para>
|
---|
1715 | </listitem>
|
---|
1716 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1717 |
|
---|
1718 | </sect3>
|
---|
1719 |
|
---|
1720 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1721 | <title>ZPL</title>
|
---|
1722 |
|
---|
1723 | <para><application>ZPL</application> is an array programming language
|
---|
1724 | designed from first principles for fast execution on both sequential
|
---|
1725 | and parallel computers. It provides a convenient high-level programming
|
---|
1726 | medium for supercomputers and large-scale clusters with efficiency
|
---|
1727 | comparable to hand-coded message passing. It is the perfect alternative
|
---|
1728 | to using a sequential language like C or Fortran and a message passing
|
---|
1729 | library like MPI.</para>
|
---|
1730 |
|
---|
1731 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1732 | <listitem>
|
---|
1733 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1734 | url="http://www.cs.washington.edu/research/zpl/home/index.html"/></para>
|
---|
1735 | </listitem>
|
---|
1736 | <listitem>
|
---|
1737 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1738 | url="http://www.cs.washington.edu/research/zpl/download/download.html"/></para>
|
---|
1739 | </listitem>
|
---|
1740 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1741 |
|
---|
1742 | </sect3>
|
---|
1743 |
|
---|
1744 | </sect2>
|
---|
1745 |
|
---|
1746 | <sect2>
|
---|
1747 | <title>Programming Libraries and Bindings</title>
|
---|
1748 |
|
---|
1749 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1750 | <title>Byte Code Engineering Library (BCEL)</title>
|
---|
1751 |
|
---|
1752 | <para><application>BECL</application> is intended to give users a
|
---|
1753 | convenient possibility to analyze, create, and manipulate (binary) Java
|
---|
1754 | class files (those ending with
|
---|
1755 | <filename class='extension'>.class</filename>). Classes are represented
|
---|
1756 | by objects which contain all the symbolic information of the given class:
|
---|
1757 | methods, fields and byte code instructions, in particular. Such objects
|
---|
1758 | can be read from an existing file, be transformed by a program (e.g., a
|
---|
1759 | class loader at run-time) and dumped to a file again. An even more
|
---|
1760 | interesting application is the creation of classes from scratch at
|
---|
1761 | run-time. The Byte Code Engineering Library may be also useful if you
|
---|
1762 | want to learn about the Java Virtual Machine (JVM) and the format of Java
|
---|
1763 | <filename class='extension'>.class</filename> files.
|
---|
1764 | <application>BCEL</application> is already being used successfully in
|
---|
1765 | several projects such as compilers, optimizers, obfuscators, code
|
---|
1766 | generators and analysis tools.</para>
|
---|
1767 |
|
---|
1768 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1769 | <listitem>
|
---|
1770 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1771 | url="http://jakarta.apache.org/bcel/index.html"/></para>
|
---|
1772 | </listitem>
|
---|
1773 | <listitem>
|
---|
1774 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1775 | url="http://archive.apache.org/dist/jakarta/bcel/"/></para>
|
---|
1776 | </listitem>
|
---|
1777 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1778 |
|
---|
1779 | </sect3>
|
---|
1780 |
|
---|
1781 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1782 | <title>Choco</title>
|
---|
1783 |
|
---|
1784 | <para><application>Choco</application> is a Java library for constraint
|
---|
1785 | satisfaction problems (CSP), constraint programming (CP) and
|
---|
1786 | explanation-based constraint solving (e-CP). It is built on a event-based
|
---|
1787 | propagation mechanism with backtrackable structures.</para>
|
---|
1788 |
|
---|
1789 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1790 | <listitem>
|
---|
1791 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1792 | url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/choco/"/></para>
|
---|
1793 | </listitem>
|
---|
1794 | <listitem>
|
---|
1795 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1796 | url="http://choco.sourceforge.net/download.html"/></para>
|
---|
1797 | </listitem>
|
---|
1798 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1799 |
|
---|
1800 | </sect3>
|
---|
1801 |
|
---|
1802 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1803 | <title>FFTW (Fastest Fourier Transform in the West)</title>
|
---|
1804 |
|
---|
1805 | <para><application>FFTW</application> is a C subroutine library for
|
---|
1806 | computing the discrete Fourier transform (DFT) in one or more dimensions,
|
---|
1807 | of arbitrary input size, and of both real and complex data (as well as of
|
---|
1808 | even/odd data, i.e., the discrete cosine/sine transforms or DCT/DST).</para>
|
---|
1809 |
|
---|
1810 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1811 | <listitem>
|
---|
1812 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1813 | url="http://www.fftw.org/"/></para>
|
---|
1814 | </listitem>
|
---|
1815 | <listitem>
|
---|
1816 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1817 | url="http://www.fftw.org/download.html"/></para>
|
---|
1818 | </listitem>
|
---|
1819 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1820 |
|
---|
1821 | </sect3>
|
---|
1822 |
|
---|
1823 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1824 | <title>GOB (GObject Builder)</title>
|
---|
1825 |
|
---|
1826 | <para><application>GOB</application> (<application>GOB2</application>
|
---|
1827 | anyway) is a preprocessor for making GObjects with inline C code so that
|
---|
1828 | generated files are not edited. Syntax is inspired by
|
---|
1829 | <application>Java</application> and <application>Yacc</application> or
|
---|
1830 | <application>Lex</application>. The implementation is intentionally kept
|
---|
1831 | simple, and no C actual code parsing is done.</para>
|
---|
1832 |
|
---|
1833 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1834 | <listitem>
|
---|
1835 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1836 | url="http://www.5z.com/jirka/gob.html"/></para>
|
---|
1837 | </listitem>
|
---|
1838 | <listitem>
|
---|
1839 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1840 | url="http://ftp.5z.com/pub/gob/"/></para>
|
---|
1841 | </listitem>
|
---|
1842 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1843 |
|
---|
1844 | </sect3>
|
---|
1845 |
|
---|
1846 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1847 | <title>GTK+/GNOME Language Bindings (wrappers)</title>
|
---|
1848 |
|
---|
1849 | <para><application>GTK+</application>/<application>GNOME</application>
|
---|
1850 | language bindings allow <application>GTK+</application> to be used from
|
---|
1851 | other programming languages, in the style of those languages.</para>
|
---|
1852 |
|
---|
1853 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1854 | <listitem>
|
---|
1855 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1856 | url="http://www.gtk.org/language-bindings.html"/></para>
|
---|
1857 | </listitem>
|
---|
1858 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1859 |
|
---|
1860 | <sect4 role="package">
|
---|
1861 | <title>gtkmm</title>
|
---|
1862 |
|
---|
1863 | <para><application>gtkmm</application> is the official C++ interface
|
---|
1864 | for the popular GUI library <application>GTK+</application>. Highlights
|
---|
1865 | include typesafe callbacks, widgets extensible via inheritance and a
|
---|
1866 | comprehensive set of widgets. You can create user interfaces either in
|
---|
1867 | code or with the Glade designer, using
|
---|
1868 | <application>libglademm</application>.</para>
|
---|
1869 |
|
---|
1870 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1871 | <listitem>
|
---|
1872 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1873 | url="http://www.gtkmm.org/"/></para>
|
---|
1874 | </listitem>
|
---|
1875 | <listitem>
|
---|
1876 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1877 | url="http://www.gtkmm.org/download.shtml"/></para>
|
---|
1878 | </listitem>
|
---|
1879 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1880 |
|
---|
1881 | </sect4>
|
---|
1882 |
|
---|
1883 | <sect4 role="package">
|
---|
1884 | <title>Java-GNOME</title>
|
---|
1885 |
|
---|
1886 | <para><application>Java-GNOME</application> is a set of Java bindings
|
---|
1887 | for the <application>GNOME</application> and
|
---|
1888 | <application>GTK+</application> libraries that allow
|
---|
1889 | <application>GNOME</application> and <application>GTK+</application>
|
---|
1890 | applications to be written in Java. The
|
---|
1891 | <application>Java-GNOME</application> API has been carefully designed
|
---|
1892 | to be easy to use, maintaining a good OO paradigm, yet still wrapping
|
---|
1893 | the entire functionality of the underlying libraries.
|
---|
1894 | <application>Java-GNOME</application> can be used with the
|
---|
1895 | <application>Eclipse</application> development environment and Glade
|
---|
1896 | user interface designer to create applications with ease.</para>
|
---|
1897 |
|
---|
1898 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1899 | <listitem>
|
---|
1900 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1901 | url="http://java-gnome.sourceforge.net/4.0/"/></para>
|
---|
1902 | </listitem>
|
---|
1903 | <listitem>
|
---|
1904 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1905 | url="http://java-gnome.sourceforge.net/4.0/get/"/></para>
|
---|
1906 | </listitem>
|
---|
1907 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1908 |
|
---|
1909 | </sect4>
|
---|
1910 |
|
---|
1911 | <sect4 role="package">
|
---|
1912 | <title>gtk2-perl</title>
|
---|
1913 |
|
---|
1914 | <para><application>gtk2-perl</application> is the collective name for
|
---|
1915 | a set of Perl bindings for <application>GTK+</application> 2.x and
|
---|
1916 | various related libraries. These modules make it easy to write
|
---|
1917 | <application>GTK</application> and <application>GNOME</application>
|
---|
1918 | applications using a natural, Perlish, object-oriented syntax.</para>
|
---|
1919 |
|
---|
1920 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1921 | <listitem>
|
---|
1922 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1923 | url="http://gtk2-perl.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
|
---|
1924 | </listitem>
|
---|
1925 | <listitem>
|
---|
1926 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1927 | url="&sourceforge-repo;/gtk2-perl"/></para>
|
---|
1928 | </listitem>
|
---|
1929 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1930 |
|
---|
1931 | </sect4>
|
---|
1932 |
|
---|
1933 | </sect3>
|
---|
1934 |
|
---|
1935 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1936 | <title>KDE Language Bindings</title>
|
---|
1937 |
|
---|
1938 | <para><application>KDE</application> and most
|
---|
1939 | <application>KDE</application> applications are implemented using the
|
---|
1940 | C++ programming language, however there are number of bindings to other
|
---|
1941 | languages are available. These include scripting languages like
|
---|
1942 | <application>Perl</application>, <application>Python</application> and
|
---|
1943 | <application>Ruby</application>, and systems programming languages such
|
---|
1944 | as Java and C#.</para>
|
---|
1945 |
|
---|
1946 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1947 | <listitem>
|
---|
1948 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1949 | url="http://developer.kde.org/language-bindings/"/></para>
|
---|
1950 | </listitem>
|
---|
1951 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1952 |
|
---|
1953 | </sect3>
|
---|
1954 |
|
---|
1955 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1956 | <title>Numerical Python (Numpy)</title>
|
---|
1957 |
|
---|
1958 | <para><application>Numerical Python</application> adds a fast array
|
---|
1959 | facility to the <application>Python</application> language.</para>
|
---|
1960 |
|
---|
1961 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1962 | <listitem>
|
---|
1963 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1964 | url="http://numeric.scipy.org/"/></para>
|
---|
1965 | </listitem>
|
---|
1966 | <listitem>
|
---|
1967 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
1968 | url="&sourceforge-repo;/numpy/"/></para>
|
---|
1969 | </listitem>
|
---|
1970 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1971 |
|
---|
1972 | </sect3>
|
---|
1973 |
|
---|
1974 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1975 | <title>Perl Scripts and Additional Modules</title>
|
---|
1976 |
|
---|
1977 | <para>There are many <application>Perl</application> scripts and
|
---|
1978 | additional modules located on the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network
|
---|
1979 | (CPAN) web site. Here you will find
|
---|
1980 | <quote>All Things Perl</quote>.</para>
|
---|
1981 |
|
---|
1982 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
1983 | <listitem>
|
---|
1984 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
1985 | url="http://cpan.org/"/></para>
|
---|
1986 | </listitem>
|
---|
1987 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
1988 |
|
---|
1989 | </sect3>
|
---|
1990 |
|
---|
1991 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
1992 | <title>SWIG</title>
|
---|
1993 |
|
---|
1994 | <para><application>SWIG</application> is a software development tool
|
---|
1995 | that connects programs written in C and C++ with a variety of high-level
|
---|
1996 | programming languages. <application>SWIG</application> is used with
|
---|
1997 | different types of languages including common scripting languages such as
|
---|
1998 | <application>Perl</application>, <application>Python</application>,
|
---|
1999 | <application>Tcl</application>/<application>Tk</application> and
|
---|
2000 | <application>Ruby</application>. The list of supported languages also
|
---|
2001 | includes non-scripting languages such as <application>C#</application>,
|
---|
2002 | <application>Common Lisp</application> (Allegro CL),
|
---|
2003 | <application>Java</application>, <application>Modula-3</application>
|
---|
2004 | and <application>OCAML</application>. Also several interpreted and
|
---|
2005 | compiled Scheme implementations (<application>Chicken</application>,
|
---|
2006 | <application>Guile</application>, <application>MzScheme</application>)
|
---|
2007 | are supported. <application>SWIG</application> is most commonly used to
|
---|
2008 | create high-level interpreted or compiled programming environments, user
|
---|
2009 | interfaces, and as a tool for testing and prototyping C/C++ software.
|
---|
2010 | <application>SWIG</application> can also export its parse tree in the
|
---|
2011 | form of XML and Lisp s-expressions.</para>
|
---|
2012 |
|
---|
2013 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
2014 | <listitem>
|
---|
2015 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
2016 | url="http://www.swig.org/"/></para>
|
---|
2017 | </listitem>
|
---|
2018 | <listitem>
|
---|
2019 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
2020 | url="&sourceforge-repo;/swig/"/></para>
|
---|
2021 | </listitem>
|
---|
2022 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
2023 |
|
---|
2024 | </sect3>
|
---|
2025 |
|
---|
2026 | </sect2>
|
---|
2027 |
|
---|
2028 | <sect2>
|
---|
2029 | <title>Integrated Development Environments</title>
|
---|
2030 |
|
---|
2031 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
2032 | <title>A-A-P</title>
|
---|
2033 |
|
---|
2034 | <para><application>A-A-P</application> makes it easy to locate, download,
|
---|
2035 | build and install software. It also supports browsing source code,
|
---|
2036 | developing programs, managing different versions and distribution of
|
---|
2037 | software and documentation. This means that
|
---|
2038 | <application> A-A-P</application> is useful both for users and for
|
---|
2039 | developers.</para>
|
---|
2040 |
|
---|
2041 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
2042 | <listitem>
|
---|
2043 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
2044 | url="http://www.a-a-p.org/index.html"/></para>
|
---|
2045 | </listitem>
|
---|
2046 | <listitem>
|
---|
2047 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
2048 | url="http://www.a-a-p.org/download.html"/></para>
|
---|
2049 | </listitem>
|
---|
2050 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
2051 |
|
---|
2052 | </sect3>
|
---|
2053 |
|
---|
2054 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
2055 | <title>Anjuta</title>
|
---|
2056 |
|
---|
2057 | <para><application>Anujuta</application> is a versatile Integrated
|
---|
2058 | Development Environment (IDE) for C and C++ on GNU/Linux. It has been
|
---|
2059 | written for <application>GTK</application>/GNOME and features a number
|
---|
2060 | of advanced programming facilities. These include project management,
|
---|
2061 | application wizards, an on-board interactive debugger, and a powerful
|
---|
2062 | source editor with source browsing and syntax highlighting.</para>
|
---|
2063 |
|
---|
2064 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
2065 | <listitem>
|
---|
2066 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
2067 | url="http://projects.gnome.org/anjuta/index.shtml"/></para>
|
---|
2068 | </listitem>
|
---|
2069 | <listitem>
|
---|
2070 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
2071 | url="http://projects.gnome.org/anjuta/downloads.shtml"/></para>
|
---|
2072 | </listitem>
|
---|
2073 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
2074 |
|
---|
2075 | </sect3>
|
---|
2076 |
|
---|
2077 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
2078 | <title>Eclipse</title>
|
---|
2079 |
|
---|
2080 | <para><application>Eclipse</application> is an open source community
|
---|
2081 | whose projects are focused on providing an extensible development
|
---|
2082 | platform and application frameworks for building software.
|
---|
2083 | <application>Eclipse</application> contains many projects, including an
|
---|
2084 | Integrated Development Environment (IDE) for Java.</para>
|
---|
2085 |
|
---|
2086 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
2087 | <listitem>
|
---|
2088 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
2089 | url="http://www.eclipse.org/"/></para>
|
---|
2090 | </listitem>
|
---|
2091 | <listitem>
|
---|
2092 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
2093 | url="http://www.eclipse.org/downloads/"/></para>
|
---|
2094 | </listitem>
|
---|
2095 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
2096 |
|
---|
2097 | </sect3>
|
---|
2098 |
|
---|
2099 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
2100 | <title>Mozart</title>
|
---|
2101 |
|
---|
2102 | <para>The <application>Mozart</application> Programming System is an
|
---|
2103 | advanced development platform for intelligent, distributed applications.
|
---|
2104 | <application>Mozart</application> is based on the Oz language, which
|
---|
2105 | supports declarative programming, object-oriented programming, constraint
|
---|
2106 | programming, and concurrency as part of a coherent whole. For
|
---|
2107 | distribution, <application>Mozart</application> provides a true network
|
---|
2108 | transparent implementation with support for network awareness, openness,
|
---|
2109 | and fault tolerance. Security is upcoming. It is an ideal platform for
|
---|
2110 | both general-purpose distributed applications as well as for hard
|
---|
2111 | problems requiring sophisticated optimization and inferencing
|
---|
2112 | abilities.</para>
|
---|
2113 |
|
---|
2114 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
2115 | <listitem>
|
---|
2116 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
2117 | url="http://www.mozart-oz.org/"/></para>
|
---|
2118 | </listitem>
|
---|
2119 | <listitem>
|
---|
2120 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
2121 | url="http://www.mozart-oz.org/download/view.cgi"/></para>
|
---|
2122 | </listitem>
|
---|
2123 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
2124 |
|
---|
2125 | </sect3>
|
---|
2126 |
|
---|
2127 | </sect2>
|
---|
2128 |
|
---|
2129 | <sect2>
|
---|
2130 | <title>Other Development Tools</title>
|
---|
2131 |
|
---|
2132 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
2133 | <title>cachecc1</title>
|
---|
2134 |
|
---|
2135 | <para><application>cachecc1</application> is a
|
---|
2136 | <application>GCC</application> cache. It can be compared with the well
|
---|
2137 | known <application>ccache</application> package. It has some unique
|
---|
2138 | features including the use of an LD_PRELOADed shared object to catch
|
---|
2139 | invocations to <command>cc1</command>, <command>cc1plus</command> and
|
---|
2140 | <command>as</command>, it transparently supports all build methods, it
|
---|
2141 | can cache <application>GCC</application> bootstraps and it can be
|
---|
2142 | combined with <application>distcc</application> to transparently
|
---|
2143 | distribute compilations.</para>
|
---|
2144 |
|
---|
2145 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
2146 | <listitem>
|
---|
2147 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
2148 | url="http://cachecc1.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
|
---|
2149 | </listitem>
|
---|
2150 | <listitem>
|
---|
2151 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
2152 | url="&sourceforge-repo;/cachecc1"/></para>
|
---|
2153 | </listitem>
|
---|
2154 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
2155 |
|
---|
2156 | </sect3>
|
---|
2157 |
|
---|
2158 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
2159 | <title>ccache</title>
|
---|
2160 |
|
---|
2161 | <para><application>ccache</application> is a compiler cache. It acts as
|
---|
2162 | a caching pre-processor to C/C++ compilers, using the <option>-E</option>
|
---|
2163 | compiler switch and a hash to detect when a compilation can be satisfied
|
---|
2164 | from cache. This often results in 5 to 10 times faster speeds in common
|
---|
2165 | compilations.</para>
|
---|
2166 |
|
---|
2167 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
2168 | <listitem>
|
---|
2169 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
2170 | url="http://ccache.samba.org/"/></para>
|
---|
2171 | </listitem>
|
---|
2172 | <listitem>
|
---|
2173 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
2174 | url="http://samba.org/ftp/ccache/"/></para>
|
---|
2175 | </listitem>
|
---|
2176 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
2177 |
|
---|
2178 | </sect3>
|
---|
2179 |
|
---|
2180 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
2181 | <title>DDD (GNU Data Display Debugger)</title>
|
---|
2182 |
|
---|
2183 | <para><application>GNU DDD</application> is a graphical front-end for
|
---|
2184 | command-line debuggers such as <application>GDB</application>,
|
---|
2185 | <application>DBX</application>, <application>WDB</application>,
|
---|
2186 | <application>Ladebug</application>, <application>JDB</application>,
|
---|
2187 | <application>XDB</application>, the <application>Perl</application>
|
---|
2188 | debugger, the <application>Bash</application> debugger, or the
|
---|
2189 | <application>Python</application> debugger. Besides <quote>usual</quote>
|
---|
2190 | front-end features such as viewing source texts,
|
---|
2191 | <application>DDD</application> has an interactive graphical data display,
|
---|
2192 | where data structures are displayed as graphs..</para>
|
---|
2193 |
|
---|
2194 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
2195 | <listitem>
|
---|
2196 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
2197 | url="http://www.gnu.org/software/ddd/"/></para>
|
---|
2198 | </listitem>
|
---|
2199 | <listitem>
|
---|
2200 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
2201 | url="http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/ddd/"/></para>
|
---|
2202 | </listitem>
|
---|
2203 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
2204 |
|
---|
2205 | </sect3>
|
---|
2206 |
|
---|
2207 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
2208 | <title>distcc</title>
|
---|
2209 |
|
---|
2210 | <para><application>distcc</application> is a program to distribute builds
|
---|
2211 | of C, C++, Objective C or Objective C++ code across several machines on a
|
---|
2212 | network. <application>distcc</application> should always generate the
|
---|
2213 | same results as a local build, is simple to install and use, and is
|
---|
2214 | usually much faster than a local compile.
|
---|
2215 | <application>distcc</application> does not require all machines to share
|
---|
2216 | a filesystem, have synchronized clocks, or to have the same libraries or
|
---|
2217 | header files installed. They can even have different processors or
|
---|
2218 | operating systems, if cross-compilers are installed.</para>
|
---|
2219 |
|
---|
2220 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
2221 | <listitem>
|
---|
2222 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
2223 | url="http://distcc.samba.org/"/></para>
|
---|
2224 | </listitem>
|
---|
2225 | <listitem>
|
---|
2226 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
2227 | url="http://distcc.samba.org/download.html"/></para>
|
---|
2228 | </listitem>
|
---|
2229 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
2230 |
|
---|
2231 | </sect3>
|
---|
2232 |
|
---|
2233 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
2234 | <title>Exuberant Ctags</title>
|
---|
2235 |
|
---|
2236 | <para><application>Exuberant Ctags</application> generates an index (or
|
---|
2237 | tag) file of language objects found in source files that allows these
|
---|
2238 | items to be quickly and easily located by a text editor or other utility.
|
---|
2239 | A tag signifies a language object for which an index entry is available
|
---|
2240 | (or, alternatively, the index entry created for that object). Tag
|
---|
2241 | generation is supported for the following languages: Assembler, AWK, ASP,
|
---|
2242 | BETA, Bourne/Korn/Zsh Shell, C, C++, COBOL, Eiffel, Fortran, Java, Lisp,
|
---|
2243 | Lua, Make, Pascal, Perl, PHP, Python, REXX, Ruby, S-Lang, Scheme, Tcl,
|
---|
2244 | Vim, and YACC. A list of editors and tools utilizing tag files may be
|
---|
2245 | found at <ulink url="http://ctags.sourceforge.net/tools.html"/>.</para>
|
---|
2246 |
|
---|
2247 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
2248 | <listitem>
|
---|
2249 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
2250 | url="http://ctags.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
|
---|
2251 | </listitem>
|
---|
2252 | <listitem>
|
---|
2253 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
2254 | url="&sourceforge-repo;/ctags/"/></para>
|
---|
2255 | </listitem>
|
---|
2256 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
2257 |
|
---|
2258 | </sect3>
|
---|
2259 |
|
---|
2260 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
2261 | <title>GDB (GNU Debugger)</title>
|
---|
2262 |
|
---|
2263 | <para><application>GDB</application> is the GNU Project debugger. It
|
---|
2264 | allows you to see what is going on <quote>inside</quote> another program
|
---|
2265 | while it executes. It also allows you to see what another program was
|
---|
2266 | doing at the moment it crashed.</para>
|
---|
2267 |
|
---|
2268 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
2269 | <listitem>
|
---|
2270 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
2271 | url="http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/"/></para>
|
---|
2272 | </listitem>
|
---|
2273 | <listitem>
|
---|
2274 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
2275 | url="ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gdb/"/></para>
|
---|
2276 | </listitem>
|
---|
2277 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
2278 |
|
---|
2279 | <para condition="html" role="usernotes">User Notes and Installation
|
---|
2280 | Instructions: <ulink url="&blfs-wiki;/OtherProgrammingTools"/></para>
|
---|
2281 |
|
---|
2282 | </sect3>
|
---|
2283 |
|
---|
2284 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
2285 | <title>gocache (GNU Object Cache)</title>
|
---|
2286 |
|
---|
2287 | <para><application>ccache</application> is a clone of
|
---|
2288 | <application>ccache</application>, with the goal of supporting
|
---|
2289 | compilers other than <application>GCC</application> and adding additional
|
---|
2290 | features. Embedded compilers will especially be in focus.</para>
|
---|
2291 |
|
---|
2292 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
2293 | <listitem>
|
---|
2294 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
2295 | url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/gocache/"/></para>
|
---|
2296 | </listitem>
|
---|
2297 | <listitem>
|
---|
2298 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
2299 | url="&sourceforge-repo;/gocache/"/></para>
|
---|
2300 | </listitem>
|
---|
2301 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
2302 |
|
---|
2303 | </sect3>
|
---|
2304 |
|
---|
2305 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
2306 | <title>OProfile</title>
|
---|
2307 |
|
---|
2308 | <para><application>OProfile</application> is a system-wide profiler for
|
---|
2309 | Linux systems, capable of profiling all running code at low overhead.
|
---|
2310 | <application>OProfile</application> is released under the GNU GPL. It
|
---|
2311 | consists of a kernel driver and a daemon for collecting sample data, and
|
---|
2312 | several post-profiling tools for turning data into information.
|
---|
2313 | <application>OProfile</application> leverages the hardware performance
|
---|
2314 | counters of the CPU to enable profiling of a wide variety of interesting
|
---|
2315 | statistics, which can also be used for basic time-spent profiling. All
|
---|
2316 | code is profiled: hardware and software interrupt handlers, kernel
|
---|
2317 | modules, the kernel, shared libraries, and applications.
|
---|
2318 | <application>OProfile</application> is currently in alpha status; however
|
---|
2319 | it has proven stable over a large number of differing configurations. It
|
---|
2320 | is being used on machines ranging from laptops to 16-way NUMA-Q
|
---|
2321 | boxes.</para>
|
---|
2322 |
|
---|
2323 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
2324 | <listitem>
|
---|
2325 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
2326 | url="http://oprofile.sourceforge.net/news/"/></para>
|
---|
2327 | </listitem>
|
---|
2328 | <listitem>
|
---|
2329 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
2330 | url="http://oprofile.sourceforge.net/download/"/></para>
|
---|
2331 | </listitem>
|
---|
2332 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
2333 |
|
---|
2334 | </sect3>
|
---|
2335 |
|
---|
2336 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
2337 | <title>SCons</title>
|
---|
2338 |
|
---|
2339 | <para><application>SCons</application> is an Open Source software
|
---|
2340 | construction tool, i.e, a next-generation build tool. Think of
|
---|
2341 | <application>SCons</application> as an improved, cross-platform
|
---|
2342 | substitute for the classic <command>make</command> utility with
|
---|
2343 | integrated functionality similar to
|
---|
2344 | <application>Autoconf</application>/<application>Automake</application>
|
---|
2345 | and compiler caches such as <command>ccache</command>.</para>
|
---|
2346 |
|
---|
2347 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
2348 | <listitem>
|
---|
2349 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
2350 | url="http://scons.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
|
---|
2351 | </listitem>
|
---|
2352 | <listitem>
|
---|
2353 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
2354 | url="&sourceforge-repo;/scons/"/></para>
|
---|
2355 | </listitem>
|
---|
2356 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
2357 |
|
---|
2358 | </sect3>
|
---|
2359 |
|
---|
2360 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
2361 | <title>strace</title>
|
---|
2362 |
|
---|
2363 | <para><application>strace</application> is a system call tracer, i.e., a
|
---|
2364 | debugging tool which prints out a trace of all the system calls made by
|
---|
2365 | another process or program.</para>
|
---|
2366 |
|
---|
2367 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
2368 | <listitem>
|
---|
2369 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
2370 | url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/strace/"/></para>
|
---|
2371 | </listitem>
|
---|
2372 | <listitem>
|
---|
2373 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
2374 | url="&sourceforge-repo;/strace/"/></para>
|
---|
2375 | </listitem>
|
---|
2376 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
2377 |
|
---|
2378 | </sect3>
|
---|
2379 |
|
---|
2380 | <sect3 role="package">
|
---|
2381 | <title>Valgrind</title>
|
---|
2382 |
|
---|
2383 | <para><application>Valgrind</application> is a collection of five tools:
|
---|
2384 | two memory error detectors, a thread error detector, a cache profiler and
|
---|
2385 | a heap profiler used for debugging and profiling Linux programs. Features
|
---|
2386 | include automatic detection of many memory management and threading bugs
|
---|
2387 | as well as detailed profiling to speed up and reduce memory use of your
|
---|
2388 | programs.</para>
|
---|
2389 |
|
---|
2390 | <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
|
---|
2391 | <listitem>
|
---|
2392 | <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
|
---|
2393 | url="http://valgrind.org/"/></para>
|
---|
2394 | </listitem>
|
---|
2395 | <listitem>
|
---|
2396 | <para>Download Location: <ulink
|
---|
2397 | url="http://valgrind.org/downloads/source_code.html"/></para>
|
---|
2398 | </listitem>
|
---|
2399 | </itemizedlist>
|
---|
2400 |
|
---|
2401 | </sect3>
|
---|
2402 |
|
---|
2403 | </sect2>
|
---|
2404 |
|
---|
2405 | </sect1>
|
---|