source: general/prog/other-tools.xml@ adf6dd9a

10.0 10.1 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 12.0 12.1 7.10 7.5 7.6 7.6-blfs 7.6-systemd 7.7 7.8 7.9 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 9.0 9.1 basic bdubbs/svn elogind gnome kde5-13430 kde5-14269 kde5-14686 kea ken/TL2024 ken/inkscape-core-mods ken/tuningfonts krejzi/svn lazarus lxqt nosym perl-modules plabs/newcss plabs/python-mods python3.11 qt5new rahul/power-profiles-daemon renodr/vulkan-addition systemd-11177 systemd-13485 trunk upgradedb xry111/intltool xry111/llvm18 xry111/soup3 xry111/test-20220226 xry111/xf86-video-removal
Last change on this file since adf6dd9a was c1a0390, checked in by Igor Živković <igor@…>, 11 years ago

Added Lua-5.2.2

git-svn-id: svn://svn.linuxfromscratch.org/BLFS/trunk/BOOK@11306 af4574ff-66df-0310-9fd7-8a98e5e911e0

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1<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
2<!DOCTYPE sect1 PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.5//EN"
3 "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/docbookx.dtd" [
4 <!ENTITY % general-entities SYSTEM "../../general.ent">
5 %general-entities;
6]>
7
8<sect1 id="other-tools" xreflabel="Other Programming Tools">
9 <?dbhtml filename="other-tools.html"?>
10
11 <sect1info>
12 <othername>$LastChangedBy$</othername>
13 <date>$Date$</date>
14 </sect1info>
15
16 <title>Other Programming Tools</title>
17
18 <indexterm zone="other-tools">
19 <primary sortas="a-Other-Programming-Tools">Other Programming Tools</primary>
20 </indexterm>
21
22 <sect2 role="introduction">
23 <title>Introduction</title>
24
25 <para>This section is provided to show you some additional programming
26 tools for which instructions have not yet been created in the book or for
27 those that are not appropriate for the book. Note that these packages may
28 not have been tested by the BLFS team, but their mention here is meant to
29 be a convenient source of additional information.</para>
30
31 <para condition="html" role="usernotes">User Notes:
32 <ulink url="&blfs-wiki;/OtherProgrammingTools"/></para>
33
34 </sect2>
35
36 <sect2>
37 <title>Programming Frameworks, Languages and Compilers</title>
38
39 <!-- This is a template for additions to this page. Cut 18 lines and
40 paste them in alphabetical order for the new package. '18dd' and
41 move down to the alpha order and 'p' works great (using vi).
42
43 <sect3 role="package">
44 <title></title>
45
46 <para><application></application> This is the description.</para>
47
48 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
49 <listitem>
50 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
51 url=""/></para>
52 </listitem>
53 <listitem>
54 <para>Download Location: <ulink
55 url=""/></para>
56 </listitem>
57 </itemizedlist>
58
59 </sect3>
60
61 -->
62
63 <sect3 role="package">
64 <title>A+</title>
65
66 <para><application>A+</application> is a powerful and efficient
67 programming language. It is freely available under the GNU General
68 Public License. It embodies a rich set of functions and operators, a
69 modern graphical user interface with many widgets and automatic
70 synchronization of widgets and variables, asynchronous execution of
71 functions associated with variables and events, dynamic loading of user
72 compiled subroutines, and many other features. Execution is by a rather
73 efficient interpreter. <application>A+</application> was created at
74 Morgan Stanley. Primarily used in a computationally-intensive business
75 environment, many critical applications written in
76 <application>A+</application> have withstood the demands of real world
77 developers over many years. Written in an interpreted language,
78 <application>A+</application> applications tend to be portable.</para>
79
80 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
81 <listitem>
82 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
83 url="http://www.aplusdev.org/"/></para>
84 </listitem>
85 <listitem>
86 <para>Download Location: <ulink
87 url="http://www.aplusdev.org/Download/index.html"/></para>
88 </listitem>
89 </itemizedlist>
90
91 </sect3>
92
93 <sect3 role="package">
94 <title>ABC</title>
95
96 <para><application>ABC</application> is an interactive programming
97 language and environment for personal computing, originally intended as a
98 good replacement for BASIC. It was designed by first doing a task
99 analysis of the programming task. <application>ABC</application> is easy
100 to learn (an hour or so for someone who has already programmed), and yet
101 easy to use. Originally intended as a language for beginners, it has
102 evolved into a powerful tool for beginners and experts alike. Some
103 features of the language include: a powerful collection of only five data
104 types that easily combines strong typing, yet without declarations,
105 no limitations (such as max int), apart from sheer exhaustion of memory
106 refinements to support top-down programming, nesting by indentation and
107 programs typically are one fourth or one fifth the size of the equivalent
108 Pascal or C program. </para>
109
110 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
111 <listitem>
112 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
113 url="http://homepages.cwi.nl/~steven/abc/"/></para>
114 </listitem>
115 <listitem>
116 <para>Download Location: <ulink
117 url="http://homepages.cwi.nl/~steven/abc/implementations.html"/></para>
118 </listitem>
119 </itemizedlist>
120
121 </sect3>
122
123 <sect3 role="package">
124 <title>ALF</title>
125
126 <para><application>ALF</application> is a language which combines
127 functional and logic programming techniques. The foundation of
128 <application>ALF</application> is Horn clause logic with equality which
129 consists of predicates and Horn clauses for logic programming, and
130 functions and equations for functional programming. The
131 <application>ALF</application> system is an efficient implementation of
132 the combination of resolution, narrowing, rewriting and rejection.
133 Similarly to Prolog, <application>ALF</application> uses a backtracking
134 strategy corresponding to a depth-first search in the derivation
135 tree.</para>
136
137 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
138 <listitem>
139 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
140 url="http://www.informatik.uni-kiel.de/~mh/systems/ALF.html"/></para>
141 </listitem>
142 <listitem>
143 <para>Download Location: <ulink
144 url="http://www.informatik.uni-kiel.de/~mh/systems/ALF/"/></para>
145 </listitem>
146 </itemizedlist>
147
148 </sect3>
149
150 <sect3 role="package">
151 <title>ASM</title>
152
153 <para><application>ASM</application> is a Java bytecode manipulation
154 framework. It can be used to dynamically generate stub classes or other
155 proxy classes, directly in binary form, or to dynamically modify
156 classes at load time, i.e., just before they are loaded into the Java
157 Virtual Machine. <application>ASM</application> offers similar
158 functionalities as BCEL or SERP, but is much smaller (33KB instead of
159 350KB for BCEL and 150KB for SERP) and faster than these tools (the
160 overhead of a load time class transformation is of the order of 60% with
161 <application>ASM</application>, 700% or more with BCEL, and 1100% or
162 more with SERP). Indeed <application>ASM</application> was designed to be
163 used in a dynamic way (though it works statically as well) and was
164 therefore designed and implemented to be as small and as fast as
165 possible.</para>
166
167 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
168 <listitem>
169 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
170 url="http://asm.objectweb.org/"/></para>
171 </listitem>
172 <listitem>
173 <para>Download Location: <ulink
174 url="http://forge.objectweb.org/projects/asm/"/></para>
175 </listitem>
176 </itemizedlist>
177
178 </sect3>
179
180 <sect3 role="package">
181 <title>BCPL</title>
182
183 <para><application>BCPL</application> is a simple typeless language that
184 was designed in 1966 by Martin Richards and implemented for the first
185 time at MIT in the Spring of 1967.</para>
186
187 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
188 <listitem>
189 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
190 url="http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/mr/BCPL.html"/></para>
191 </listitem>
192 <listitem>
193 <para>Download Location: <ulink
194 url="http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/users/mr/BCPL/"/></para>
195 </listitem>
196 </itemizedlist>
197
198 </sect3>
199
200 <sect3 role="package">
201 <title>BETA</title>
202
203 <para><application>BETA</application> is developed within the
204 Scandinavian School of object-orientation, where the first
205 object-oriented language, Simula, was developed.
206 <application>BETA</application> is a modern language in the Simula
207 tradition. The resulting language is smaller than Simula in spite of
208 being considerably more expressive. <application>BETA</application> is a
209 strongly typed language like Simula, Eiffel and C++, with most type
210 checking being carried out at compile-time. It is well known that it is
211 not possible to obtain all type checking at compile time without
212 sacrificing the expressiveness of the language.
213 <application>BETA</application> has optimum balance between compile-time
214 type checking and run-time type checking.</para>
215
216 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
217 <listitem>
218 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
219 url="http://www.daimi.au.dk/~beta/"/></para>
220 </listitem>
221 <listitem>
222 <para>Download Location: <ulink
223 url="ftp://ftp.daimi.au.dk/pub/beta/"/></para>
224 </listitem>
225 </itemizedlist>
226
227 </sect3>
228
229 <sect3 role="package">
230 <title>&lt;bigwig&gt;</title>
231
232 <para><application>&lt;bigwig&gt;</application> is a high-level
233 programming language for developing interactive Web services. Programs
234 are compiled into a conglomerate of lower-level technologies such as C
235 code, HTTP, HTML, JavaScript, and SSL, all running on top of a runtime
236 system based on an Apache Web server module. It is a descendant of the
237 Mawl project but is a completely new design and implementation with
238 vastly expanded ambitions. The <application>&lt;bigwig&gt;</application>
239 language is really a collection of tiny domain-specific languages
240 focusing on different aspects of interactive Web services. These
241 contributing languages are held together by a C-like skeleton language.
242 Thus, <application>&lt;bigwig&gt;</application> has the look and feel of
243 C-programs but with special data and control structures.</para>
244
245 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
246 <listitem>
247 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
248 url="http://www.brics.dk/bigwig/"/></para>
249 </listitem>
250 <listitem>
251 <para>Download Location: <ulink
252 url="http://www.brics.dk/bigwig/download/"/></para>
253 </listitem>
254 </itemizedlist>
255
256 </sect3>
257
258 <sect3 role="package">
259 <title>Bigloo</title>
260
261 <para><application>Bigloo</application> is a Scheme implementation
262 devoted to one goal: enabling Scheme based programming style where C(++)
263 is usually required. <application>Bigloo</application> attempts to make
264 Scheme practical by offering features usually presented by traditional
265 programming languages but not offered by Scheme and functional
266 programming. Bigloo compiles Scheme modules and delivers small and fast
267 stand-alone binary executables. It enables full connections between
268 Scheme and C programs, between Scheme and Java programs, and between
269 Scheme and C# programs.</para>
270
271 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
272 <listitem>
273 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
274 url="http://www-sop.inria.fr/mimosa/fp/Bigloo/"/></para>
275 </listitem>
276 <listitem>
277 <para>Download Location: <ulink
278 url="ftp://ftp-sop.inria.fr/mimosa/fp/Bigloo/"/></para>
279 </listitem>
280 </itemizedlist>
281
282 </sect3>
283
284 <sect3 role="package">
285 <title>C--</title>
286
287 <para><application>C--</application> is a portable assembly language that
288 can be generated by a front end and implemented by any of several code
289 generators. It serves as an interface between high-level compilers and
290 retargetable, optimizing code generators. Authors of front ends and code
291 generators can cooperate easily.</para>
292
293 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
294 <listitem>
295 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
296 url="http://www.cminusminus.org/"/></para>
297 </listitem>
298 <listitem>
299 <para>Download Location: <ulink
300 url="http://www.cminusminus.org/code.html"/></para>
301 </listitem>
302 </itemizedlist>
303
304 </sect3>
305
306 <sect3 role="package">
307 <title>Caml</title>
308
309 <para><application>Caml</application> is a general-purpose programming
310 language, designed with program safety and reliability in mind. It is
311 very expressive, yet easy to learn and use.
312 <application>Caml</application> supports functional, imperative, and
313 object-oriented programming styles. It has been developed and distributed
314 by INRIA, France's national research institute for computer science,
315 since 1985. The Objective Caml system is the main implementation of the
316 <application>Caml</application> language. It features a powerful module
317 system and a full-fledged object-oriented layer. It comes with a
318 native-code compiler that supports numerous architectures, for high
319 performance; a bytecode compiler, for increased portability; and an
320 interactive loop, for experimentation and rapid development.</para>
321
322 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
323 <listitem>
324 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
325 url="http://caml.inria.fr/"/></para>
326 </listitem>
327 <listitem>
328 <para>Download Location: <ulink
329 url="http://caml.inria.fr/pub/distrib/"/></para>
330 </listitem>
331 </itemizedlist>
332
333 </sect3>
334
335 <sect3 role="package">
336 <title>Cayenne</title>
337
338 <para><application>Cayenne</application> is a simple(?) functional
339 language with a powerful type system. The basic types are functions,
340 products, and sums. Functions and products use dependent types to gain
341 additional power. There are very few building blocks in the language, but
342 a lot of <quote>syntactic sugar</quote> to make it more readable. There
343 is no separate module language in <application>Cayenne</application>
344 since the dependent types allow the normal expression language to be used
345 at the module level as well. The design of
346 <application>Cayenne</application> has been heavily influenced by
347 <application>Haskell</application> and constructive type theory and with
348 some things borrowed from Java. The drawback of such a powerful type
349 system is that the type checking becomes undecidable.</para>
350
351 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
352 <listitem>
353 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
354 url="http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~augustss/cayenne/"/></para>
355 </listitem>
356 <listitem>
357 <para>Download Location: <ulink
358 url="http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~augustss/cayenne/get.html"/></para>
359 </listitem>
360 </itemizedlist>
361
362 </sect3>
363
364 <sect3 role="package">
365 <title>Ch</title>
366
367 <para><application>Ch</application> is an embeddable C/C++ interpreter
368 for cross-platform scripting, shell programming, 2D/3D plotting,
369 numerical computing, and embedded scripting.</para>
370
371 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
372 <listitem>
373 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
374 url="http://www.softintegration.com/"/></para>
375 </listitem>
376 <listitem>
377 <para>Download Location: <ulink
378 url="http://www.softintegration.com/products/chstandard/download/"/></para>
379 </listitem>
380 </itemizedlist>
381
382 </sect3>
383
384 <sect3 role="package">
385 <title>Clean</title>
386
387 <para><application>Clean</application> is a general purpose,
388 state-of-the-art, pure and lazy functional programming language designed
389 for making real-world applications. <application>Clean</application> is
390 the only functional language in the world which offers uniqueness typing.
391 This type system makes it possible in a pure functional language to
392 incorporate destructive updates of arbitrary data structures (including
393 arrays) and to make direct interfaces to the outside imperative world.
394 The type system makes it possible to develop efficient
395 applications.</para>
396
397 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
398 <listitem>
399 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
400 url="http://wiki.clean.cs.ru.nl/Clean"/></para>
401 </listitem>
402 <listitem>
403 <para>Download Location: <ulink
404 url="http://wiki.clean.cs.ru.nl/Download_Clean"/></para>
405 </listitem>
406 </itemizedlist>
407
408 </sect3>
409
410 <sect3 role="package">
411 <title>CORN</title>
412
413 <para><application>CORN</application> is designed for modeling
414 concurrency and advanced computation. It provides lazy evaluation between
415 concurrently worked threads, with object-oriented and functional style of
416 semantic. This language can be also used for parallel computation.</para>
417
418 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
419 <listitem>
420 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
421 url="http://cornlanguage.com/"/></para>
422 </listitem>
423 <listitem>
424 <para>Download Location: <ulink
425 url="http://cornlanguage.com/download/download.html"/></para>
426 </listitem>
427 </itemizedlist>
428
429 </sect3>
430
431 <sect3 role="package">
432 <title>Cyclone</title>
433
434 <para><application>Cyclone</application> is a programming language based
435 on C that is safe, meaning that it rules out programs that have buffer
436 overflows, dangling pointers, format string attacks, and so on.
437 High-level, type-safe languages, such as Java, Scheme, or ML also provide
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>&lt;bigwig&gt;</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>Mercury</title>
1067
1068 <para><application>Mercury</application> is a new logic/functional
1069 programming language, which combines the clarity and expressiveness of
1070 declarative programming with advanced static analysis and error detection
1071 features. Its highly optimized execution algorithm delivers efficiency
1072 far in excess of existing logic programming systems, and close to
1073 conventional programming systems. <application>Mercury</application>
1074 addresses the problems of large-scale program development, allowing
1075 modularity, separate compilation, and numerous optimization/time
1076 trade-offs.</para>
1077
1078 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1079 <listitem>
1080 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1081 url="http://www.mercury.csse.unimelb.edu.au/"/></para>
1082 </listitem>
1083 <listitem>
1084 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1085 url="http://www.mercury.csse.unimelb.edu.au/download.html"/></para>
1086 </listitem>
1087 </itemizedlist>
1088
1089 </sect3>
1090
1091 <sect3 role="package">
1092 <title>Mono</title>
1093
1094 <para><application>Mono</application> provides the necessary software to
1095 develop and run .NET client and server applications on Linux, Solaris,
1096 Mac OS X, Windows, and Unix. Sponsored by Novell, the
1097 <application>Mono</application> open source project has an active and
1098 enthusiastic contributing community and is positioned to become the
1099 leading choice for development of Linux applications.</para>
1100
1101 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1102 <listitem>
1103 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1104 url="http://www.mono-project.com/Main_Page"/></para>
1105 </listitem>
1106 <listitem>
1107 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1108 url="http://ftp.novell.com/pub/mono/archive/"/></para>
1109 </listitem>
1110 </itemizedlist>
1111
1112 </sect3>
1113
1114 <sect3 role="package">
1115 <title>MPD</title>
1116
1117 <para><application>MPD</application> is a variant of the
1118 <application>SR</application> programming language.
1119 <application>SR</application> has a Pascal-like syntax and uses guarded
1120 commands for control statements. <application>MPD</application> has a
1121 C-like syntax and C-like control statements. However, the main components
1122 of the two languages are the same: resources, globals, operations, procs,
1123 procedures, processes, and virtual machines. Moreover,
1124 <application>MPD</application> supports the same variety of concurrent
1125 programming mechanisms as <application>SR</application>: co statements,
1126 semaphores, call/send/forward invocations, and receive and input
1127 statements.</para>
1128
1129 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1130 <listitem>
1131 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1132 url="http://www.cs.arizona.edu/mpd/"/></para>
1133 </listitem>
1134 <listitem>
1135 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1136 url="http://www.cs.arizona.edu/mpd/download/"/></para>
1137 </listitem>
1138 </itemizedlist>
1139
1140 </sect3>
1141
1142 <sect3 role="package">
1143 <title>Nemerle</title>
1144
1145 <para><application>Nemerle</application> is a high-level statically-typed
1146 programming language for the .NET platform. It offers functional,
1147 object-oriented and imperative features. It has a simple C#-like syntax
1148 and a powerful meta-programming system. Features that come from the
1149 functional land are variants, pattern matching, type inference and
1150 parameter polymorphism (aka generics). The meta-programming system allows
1151 great compiler extensibility, embedding domain specific languages,
1152 partial evaluation and aspect-oriented programming.</para>
1153
1154 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1155 <listitem>
1156 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1157 url="http://nemerle.org/Main_Page"/></para>
1158 </listitem>
1159 <listitem>
1160 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1161 url="http://nemerle.org/Download"/></para>
1162 </listitem>
1163 </itemizedlist>
1164
1165 </sect3>
1166
1167 <sect3 role="package">
1168 <title>Octave</title>
1169
1170 <para>GNU <application>Octave</application> is a high-level language,
1171 primarily intended for numerical computations. It provides a convenient
1172 command line interface for solving linear and nonlinear problems
1173 numerically, and for performing other numerical experiments using a
1174 language that is mostly compatible with Matlab. It may also be used as
1175 a batch-oriented language. <application>Octave</application> has
1176 extensive tools for solving common numerical linear algebra problems,
1177 finding the roots of nonlinear equations, integrating ordinary functions,
1178 manipulating polynomials, and integrating ordinary differential and
1179 differential-algebraic equations. It is easily extensible and
1180 customizable via user-defined functions written in
1181 <application>Octave</application>'s own language, or using dynamically
1182 loaded modules written in C++, C, Fortran, or other languages.</para>
1183
1184 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1185 <listitem>
1186 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1187 url="http://www.gnu.org/software/octave/"/></para>
1188 </listitem>
1189 <listitem>
1190 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1191 url="http://www.gnu.org/software/octave/download.html"/></para>
1192 </listitem>
1193 </itemizedlist>
1194
1195 </sect3>
1196
1197 <sect3 role="package">
1198 <title>OO2C (Optimizing Oberon-2 Compiler)</title>
1199
1200 <para><application>OO2C</application> is an Oberon-2 development
1201 platform. It consists of an optimizing compiler, a number of related
1202 tools, a set of standard library modules and a reference manual.
1203 Oberon-2 is a general-purpose programming language in the tradition of
1204 Pascal and Modula-2. Its most important features are block structure,
1205 modularity, separate compilation, static typing with strong type checking
1206 (also across module boundaries) and type extension with type-bound
1207 procedures. Type extension makes Oberon-2 an object-oriented
1208 language.</para>
1209
1210 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1211 <listitem>
1212 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1213 url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/ooc/"/></para>
1214 </listitem>
1215 <listitem>
1216 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1217 url="&sourceforge-repo;/ooc/"/></para>
1218 </listitem>
1219 </itemizedlist>
1220
1221 </sect3>
1222
1223 <sect3 role="package">
1224 <title>Ordered Graph Data Language (OGDL)</title>
1225
1226 <para><application>OGDL</application> is a structured textual format that
1227 represents information in the form of graphs, where the nodes are strings
1228 and the arcs or edges are spaces or indentation.</para>
1229
1230 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1231 <listitem>
1232 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1233 url="http://ogdl.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
1234 </listitem>
1235 <listitem>
1236 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1237 url="&sourceforge-repo;/ogdl/"/></para>
1238 </listitem>
1239 </itemizedlist>
1240
1241 </sect3>
1242
1243 <sect3 role="package">
1244 <title>Pike</title>
1245
1246 <para><application>Pike</application> is a dynamic programming language
1247 with a syntax similar to Java and C. It is simple to learn, does not
1248 require long compilation passes and has powerful built-in data types
1249 allowing simple and really fast data manipulation. Pike is released under
1250 the GNU GPL, GNU LGPL and MPL.</para>
1251
1252 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1253 <listitem>
1254 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1255 url="http://pike.ida.liu.se/"/></para>
1256 </listitem>
1257 <listitem>
1258 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1259 url="http://pike.ida.liu.se/download/pub/pike"/></para>
1260 </listitem>
1261 </itemizedlist>
1262
1263 </sect3>
1264<!-- Broken link
1265 <sect3 role="package">
1266 <title>pyc</title>
1267
1268 <para><application>pyc</application> is a compiler that compiles
1269 <application>Python</application> source code to bytecode (from
1270 <filename class='extension'>.py</filename> to
1271 <filename class='extension'>.pyc</filename>), written entirely in
1272 <application>Python</application> (based on code from the <quote>compiler
1273 package</quote>). It can compile itself and pass a 3-stage bootstrap.
1274 <application>pyc</application> performs advanced optimizations which
1275 results in better (smaller) bytecode.</para>
1276
1277 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1278 <listitem>
1279 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1280 url="http://students.ceid.upatras.gr/~sxanth/pyc/"/></para>
1281 </listitem>
1282 </itemizedlist>
1283
1284 </sect3>
1285-->
1286 <sect3 role="package">
1287 <title>Pyrex</title>
1288
1289 <para><application>Pyrex</application> is a language specially designed
1290 for writing Python extension modules. It's designed to bridge the gap
1291 between the nice, high-level, easy-to-use world of
1292 <application>Python</application> and the messy, low-level world of C.
1293 <application>Pyrex</application> lets you write code that mixes
1294 <application>Python</application> and C data types any way you want, and
1295 compiles it into a C extension for
1296 <application>Python</application>.</para>
1297
1298 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1299 <listitem>
1300 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1301 url="http://www.cosc.canterbury.ac.nz/greg.ewing/python/Pyrex/"/></para>
1302 </listitem>
1303 </itemizedlist>
1304
1305 </sect3>
1306
1307 <sect3 role="package">
1308 <title>Q</title>
1309
1310 <para><application>Q</application> is a functional programming language
1311 based on term rewriting. Thus, a <application>Q</application> program or
1312 <quote>script</quote> is simply a collection of equations which are used
1313 to evaluate expressions in a symbolic fashion. The equations establish
1314 algebraic identities and are interpreted as rewriting rules in order to
1315 reduce expressions to <quote>normal forms</quote>.</para>
1316
1317 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1318 <listitem>
1319 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1320 url="http://q-lang.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
1321 </listitem>
1322 <listitem>
1323 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1324 url="&sourceforge-repo;/q-lang/"/></para>
1325 </listitem>
1326 </itemizedlist>
1327
1328 </sect3>
1329
1330 <sect3 role="package">
1331 <title>R</title>
1332
1333 <para><application>R</application> is a language and environment for
1334 statistical computing and graphics. It is a GNU project similar to the
1335 <application>S</application> language and environment which was developed
1336 at Bell Laboratories (formerly AT&amp;T, now Lucent Technologies) by
1337 John Chambers and colleagues. <application>R</application> can be
1338 considered as a different implementation of <application>S</application>.
1339 There are some important differences, but much code written for
1340 <application>S</application> runs unaltered under
1341 <application>R</application>. <application>R</application> provides a
1342 wide variety of statistical (linear and nonlinear modelling, classical
1343 statistical tests, time-series analysis, classification, clustering, ...)
1344 and graphical techniques, and is highly extensible. The
1345 <application>S</application> language is often the vehicle of choice for
1346 research in statistical methodology, and <application>R</application>
1347 provides an Open Source route to participation in that activity.</para>
1348
1349 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1350 <listitem>
1351 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1352 url="http://www.r-project.org/"/></para>
1353 </listitem>
1354 <listitem>
1355 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1356 url="http://cran.r-project.org/mirrors.html"/></para>
1357 </listitem>
1358 </itemizedlist>
1359
1360 </sect3>
1361
1362 <sect3 role="package">
1363 <title>Regina Rexx</title>
1364
1365 <para><application>Regina</application> is a Rexx interpreter that has
1366 been ported to most Unix platforms (Linux, FreeBSD, Solaris, AIX, HP-UX,
1367 etc.) and also to OS/2, eCS, DOS, Win9x/Me/NT/2k/XP, Amiga, AROS, QNX4.x,
1368 QNX6.x BeOS, MacOS X, EPOC32, AtheOS, OpenVMS, SkyOS and OpenEdition.
1369 Rexx is a programming language that was designed to be easy to use for
1370 inexperienced programmers yet powerful enough for experienced users. It
1371 is also a language ideally suited as a macro language for other
1372 applications.</para>
1373
1374 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1375 <listitem>
1376 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1377 url="http://regina-rexx.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
1378 </listitem>
1379 <listitem>
1380 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1381 url="&sourceforge-repo;/regina-rexx"/></para>
1382 </listitem>
1383 </itemizedlist>
1384
1385 </sect3>
1386
1387 <sect3 role="package">
1388 <title>Serp</title>
1389
1390 <para><application>Serp</application> is an open source framework for
1391 manipulating Java bytecode. The goal of the
1392 <application>Serp</application> bytecode framework is to tap the full
1393 power of bytecode modification while lowering its associated costs. The
1394 framework provides a set of high-level APIs for manipulating all aspects
1395 of bytecode, from large-scale structures like class member fields to the
1396 individual instructions that comprise the code of methods. While in order
1397 to perform any advanced manipulation, some understanding of the class
1398 file format and especially of the JVM instruction set is necessary, the
1399 framework makes it as easy as possible to enter the world of bytecode
1400 development.</para>
1401
1402 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1403 <listitem>
1404 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1405 url="http://serp.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
1406 </listitem>
1407 <listitem>
1408 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1409 url="http://serp.sourceforge.net/files/"/></para>
1410 </listitem>
1411 </itemizedlist>
1412
1413 </sect3>
1414
1415 <sect3 role="package">
1416 <title>Small Device C Compiler (SDCC)</title>
1417
1418 <para><application>SDCC</application> is a Freeware, retargetable,
1419 optimizing ANSI-C compiler that targets the Intel 8051, Maxim 80DS390
1420 and the Zilog Z80 based MCUs. Work is in progress on supporting the
1421 Motorola 68HC08 as well as Microchip PIC16 and PIC18 series. The entire
1422 source code for the compiler is distributed under GPL.</para>
1423
1424 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1425 <listitem>
1426 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1427 url="http://sdcc.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
1428 </listitem>
1429 <listitem>
1430 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1431 url="http://sdcc.sourceforge.net/snap.php#Source"/></para>
1432 </listitem>
1433 </itemizedlist>
1434
1435 </sect3>
1436
1437 <sect3 role="package">
1438 <title>SmartEiffel (The GNU Eiffel Compiler)</title>
1439
1440 <para><application>SmartEiffel</application> claims to be <quote>the
1441 fastest and the slimmest multi-platform Eiffel compiler on Earth</quote>.
1442 Eiffel is an object-oriented programming language which emphasizes the
1443 production of robust software. Its syntax is keyword-oriented in the
1444 ALGOL and Pascal tradition. Eiffel is strongly statically typed, with
1445 automatic memory management (typically implemented by garbage
1446 collection). Distinguishing characteristics of Eiffel include Design by
1447 contract (DbC), liberal use of inheritance including multiple
1448 inheritance, a type system handling both value and reference semantics,
1449 and generic classes. Eiffel has a unified type system&mdash;all types in
1450 Eiffel are classes, so it is possible to create subclasses of the basic
1451 classes such as INTEGER. Eiffel has operator overloading, including the
1452 ability to define new operators, but does not have method
1453 overloading.</para>
1454
1455 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1456 <listitem>
1457 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1458 url="http://smarteiffel.loria.fr/"/></para>
1459 </listitem>
1460 <listitem>
1461 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1462 url="ftp://ftp.cs.rit.edu/pub/mirrors/SmartEiffel/"/></para>
1463 </listitem>
1464 </itemizedlist>
1465
1466 </sect3>
1467
1468 <sect3 role="package">
1469 <title>Squeak</title>
1470
1471 <para><application>Squeak</application> is an open, highly-portable
1472 Smalltalk implementation whose virtual machine is written entirely in
1473 Smalltalk, making it easy to debug, analyze, and change. To achieve
1474 practical performance, a translator produces an equivalent C program
1475 whose performance is comparable to commercial Smalltalks. Other
1476 noteworthy aspects of <application>Squeak</application> include:
1477 real-time sound and music synthesis written entirely in Smalltalk,
1478 extensions of BitBlt to handle color of any depth and anti-aliased
1479 image rotation and scaling, network access support that allows simple
1480 construction of servers and other useful facilities, it runs
1481 bit-identical on many platforms (Windows, Mac, Unix, and others), a
1482 compact object format that typically requires only a single word of
1483 overhead per object and a simple yet efficient incremental garbage
1484 collector for 32-bit direct pointers efficient bulk-mutation of
1485 objects.</para>
1486
1487 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1488 <listitem>
1489 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1490 url="http://www.squeak.org/"/></para>
1491 </listitem>
1492 <listitem>
1493 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1494 url="http://www.squeak.org/Download/"/></para>
1495 </listitem>
1496 </itemizedlist>
1497
1498 </sect3>
1499
1500 <sect3 role="package">
1501 <title>SR (Synchronizing Resources)</title>
1502
1503 <para><application>SR</application> is a language for writing concurrent
1504 programs. The main language constructs are resources and operations.
1505 Resources encapsulate processes and variables they share; operations
1506 provide the primary mechanism for process interaction.
1507 <application>SR</application> provides a novel integration of the
1508 mechanisms for invoking and servicing operations. Consequently, all of
1509 local and remote procedure call, rendezvous, message passing, dynamic
1510 process creation, multicast, and semaphores are supported.
1511 <application>SR</application> also supports shared global variables and
1512 operations.</para>
1513
1514 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1515 <listitem>
1516 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1517 url="http://www.cs.arizona.edu/sr/index.html"/></para>
1518 </listitem>
1519 <listitem>
1520 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1521 url="ftp://ftp.cs.arizona.edu/sr/"/></para>
1522 </listitem>
1523 </itemizedlist>
1524
1525 </sect3>
1526
1527 <sect3 role="package">
1528 <title>Standard ML</title>
1529
1530 <para>Standard ML is a safe, modular, strict, functional, polymorphic
1531 programming language with compile-time type checking and type inference,
1532 garbage collection, exception handling, immutable data types and
1533 updatable references, abstract data types, and parametric modules. It has
1534 efficient implementations and a formal definition with a proof of
1535 soundness. There are many implementations of Standard ML, among them:</para>
1536
1537 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1538 <listitem>
1539 <para>ML Kit: <ulink
1540 url="http://www.it-c.dk/research/mlkit/"/></para>
1541 </listitem>
1542 <listitem>
1543 <para>MLton: <ulink
1544 url="http://mlton.org/"/></para>
1545 </listitem>
1546 <listitem>
1547 <para>Moscow ML: <ulink
1548 url="http://www.dina.kvl.dk/~sestoft/mosml.html"/></para>
1549 </listitem>
1550 <listitem>
1551 <para>Poly/ML: <ulink
1552 url="http://www.polyml.org/"/></para>
1553 </listitem>
1554 <listitem>
1555 <para>Standard ML of New Jersey: <ulink
1556 url="http://www.smlnj.org/"/></para>
1557 </listitem>
1558 </itemizedlist>
1559
1560 </sect3>
1561
1562 <sect3 role="package">
1563 <title>Steel Bank Common Lisp (SBCL)</title>
1564
1565 <para><application>SBCL</application> is an open source (free software)
1566 compiler and runtime system for ANSI Common Lisp. It provides an
1567 interactive environment including an integrated native compiler, a
1568 debugger, and many extensions. <application>SBCL</application> runs on a
1569 number of platforms.</para>
1570
1571 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1572 <listitem>
1573 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1574 url="http://www.sbcl.org/"/></para>
1575 </listitem>
1576 <listitem>
1577 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1578 url="&sourceforge-repo;/sbcl/"/></para>
1579 </listitem>
1580 </itemizedlist>
1581
1582 </sect3>
1583
1584 <sect3 role="package">
1585 <title>Tiny C Compiler (TCC)</title>
1586
1587 <para><application>Tiny C Compiler</application> is a small C compiler
1588 that can be used to compile and execute C code everywhere, for example
1589 on rescue disks (about 100KB for x86 TCC executable, including C
1590 preprocessor, C compiler, assembler and linker).
1591 <application>TCC</application> is fast. It generates optimized x86 code,
1592 has no byte code overhead and compiles, assembles and links several times
1593 faster than <application>GCC</application>.
1594 <application>TCC</application> is versatile, any C dynamic library can be
1595 used directly. It is heading toward full ISOC99 compliance and can
1596 compile itself. The compiler is safe as it includes an optional memory
1597 and bound checker. Bound checked code can be mixed freely with standard
1598 code. <application>TCC</application> compiles and executes C source
1599 directly. No linking or assembly necessary. A full C preprocessor and
1600 GNU-like assembler is included. It is C script supported; just add
1601 <quote>#!/usr/local/bin/tcc -run</quote> on the first line of your C
1602 source, and execute it directly from the command line. With libtcc, you
1603 can use <application>TCC</application> as a backend for dynamic code
1604 generation.</para>
1605
1606 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1607 <listitem>
1608 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1609 url="http://bellard.org/tcc/"/></para>
1610 </listitem>
1611 <listitem>
1612 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1613 url="http://download.savannah.gnu.org/releases-noredirect/tinycc/"/></para>
1614 </listitem>
1615 </itemizedlist>
1616
1617 </sect3>
1618
1619 <sect3 role="package">
1620 <title>TinyCOBOL</title>
1621
1622 <para><application>TinyCOBOL</application> is a COBOL compiler being
1623 developed by members of the free software community. The mission is to
1624 produce a COBOL compiler based on the COBOL 85 standards.
1625 <application>TinyCOBOL</application> is available for the Intel
1626 architecture (IA32) and compatible processors on the following platforms:
1627 BeOS, FreeBSD, Linux and MinGW on Windows.</para>
1628
1629 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1630 <listitem>
1631 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1632 url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/tiny-cobol/"/></para>
1633 </listitem>
1634 <listitem>
1635 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1636 url="&sourceforge-repo;/tiny-cobol/"/></para>
1637 </listitem>
1638 </itemizedlist>
1639
1640 </sect3>
1641
1642 <sect3 role="package">
1643 <title>Yorick</title>
1644
1645 <para><application>Yorick</application> is an interpreted programming
1646 language, designed for postprocessing or steering large scientific
1647 simulation codes. Smaller scientific simulations or calculations, such as
1648 the flow past an airfoil or the motion of a drumhead, can be written as
1649 standalone yorick programs. The language features a compact syntax for
1650 many common array operations, so it processes large arrays of numbers
1651 very efficiently. Unlike most interpreters, which are several hundred
1652 times slower than compiled code for number crunching,
1653 <application>Yorick</application> can approach to within a factor of four
1654 or five of compiled speed for many common tasks. Superficially,
1655 <application>Yorick</application> code resembles C code, but
1656 <application>Yorick</application> variables are never explicitly declared
1657 and have a dynamic scoping similar to many Lisp dialects. The
1658 <quote>unofficial</quote> home page for <application>Yorick</application>
1659 can be found at <ulink url="http://www.maumae.net/yorick"/>.</para>
1660
1661 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1662 <listitem>
1663 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1664 url="http://yorick.sourceforge.net/index.php"/></para>
1665 </listitem>
1666 <listitem>
1667 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1668 url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/yorick/files/"/></para>
1669 </listitem>
1670 </itemizedlist>
1671
1672 </sect3>
1673
1674 <sect3 role="package">
1675 <title>ZPL</title>
1676
1677 <para><application>ZPL</application> is an array programming language
1678 designed from first principles for fast execution on both sequential
1679 and parallel computers. It provides a convenient high-level programming
1680 medium for supercomputers and large-scale clusters with efficiency
1681 comparable to hand-coded message passing. It is the perfect alternative
1682 to using a sequential language like C or Fortran and a message passing
1683 library like MPI.</para>
1684
1685 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1686 <listitem>
1687 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1688 url="http://www.cs.washington.edu/research/zpl/home/index.html"/></para>
1689 </listitem>
1690 <listitem>
1691 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1692 url="http://www.cs.washington.edu/research/zpl/download/download.html"/></para>
1693 </listitem>
1694 </itemizedlist>
1695
1696 </sect3>
1697
1698 </sect2>
1699
1700 <sect2>
1701 <title>Programming Libraries and Bindings</title>
1702
1703 <sect3 role="package">
1704 <title>Byte Code Engineering Library (BCEL)</title>
1705
1706 <para><application>BECL</application> is intended to give users a
1707 convenient possibility to analyze, create, and manipulate (binary) Java
1708 class files (those ending with
1709 <filename class='extension'>.class</filename>). Classes are represented
1710 by objects which contain all the symbolic information of the given class:
1711 methods, fields and byte code instructions, in particular. Such objects
1712 can be read from an existing file, be transformed by a program (e.g., a
1713 class loader at run-time) and dumped to a file again. An even more
1714 interesting application is the creation of classes from scratch at
1715 run-time. The Byte Code Engineering Library may be also useful if you
1716 want to learn about the Java Virtual Machine (JVM) and the format of Java
1717 <filename class='extension'>.class</filename> files.
1718 <application>BCEL</application> is already being used successfully in
1719 several projects such as compilers, optimizers, obfuscators, code
1720 generators and analysis tools.</para>
1721
1722 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1723 <listitem>
1724 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1725 url="http://jakarta.apache.org/bcel/index.html"/></para>
1726 </listitem>
1727 <listitem>
1728 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1729 url="http://archive.apache.org/dist/jakarta/bcel/"/></para>
1730 </listitem>
1731 </itemizedlist>
1732
1733 </sect3>
1734
1735 <sect3 role="package">
1736 <title>Choco</title>
1737
1738 <para><application>Choco</application> is a Java library for constraint
1739 satisfaction problems (CSP), constraint programming (CP) and
1740 explanation-based constraint solving (e-CP). It is built on a event-based
1741 propagation mechanism with backtrackable structures.</para>
1742
1743 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1744 <listitem>
1745 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1746 url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/choco/"/></para>
1747 </listitem>
1748 <listitem>
1749 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1750 url="http://choco.sourceforge.net/download.html"/></para>
1751 </listitem>
1752 </itemizedlist>
1753
1754 </sect3>
1755
1756 <sect3 role="package">
1757 <title>FFTW (Fastest Fourier Transform in the West)</title>
1758
1759 <para><application>FFTW</application> is a C subroutine library for
1760 computing the discrete Fourier transform (DFT) in one or more dimensions,
1761 of arbitrary input size, and of both real and complex data (as well as of
1762 even/odd data, i.e., the discrete cosine/sine transforms or DCT/DST).</para>
1763
1764 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1765 <listitem>
1766 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1767 url="http://www.fftw.org/"/></para>
1768 </listitem>
1769 <listitem>
1770 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1771 url="http://www.fftw.org/download.html"/></para>
1772 </listitem>
1773 </itemizedlist>
1774
1775 </sect3>
1776
1777 <sect3 role="package">
1778 <title>GOB (GObject Builder)</title>
1779
1780 <para><application>GOB</application> (<application>GOB2</application>
1781 anyway) is a preprocessor for making GObjects with inline C code so that
1782 generated files are not edited. Syntax is inspired by
1783 <application>Java</application> and <application>Yacc</application> or
1784 <application>Lex</application>. The implementation is intentionally kept
1785 simple, and no C actual code parsing is done.</para>
1786
1787 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1788 <listitem>
1789 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1790 url="http://www.5z.com/jirka/gob.html"/></para>
1791 </listitem>
1792 <listitem>
1793 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1794 url="http://ftp.5z.com/pub/gob/"/></para>
1795 </listitem>
1796 </itemizedlist>
1797
1798 </sect3>
1799
1800 <sect3 role="package">
1801 <title>GTK+/GNOME Language Bindings (wrappers)</title>
1802
1803 <para><application>GTK+</application>/<application>GNOME</application>
1804 language bindings allow <application>GTK+</application> to be used from
1805 other programming languages, in the style of those languages.</para>
1806
1807 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1808 <listitem>
1809 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1810 url="http://www.gtk.org/language-bindings.html"/></para>
1811 </listitem>
1812 </itemizedlist>
1813
1814 <sect4 role="package">
1815 <title>gtkmm</title>
1816
1817 <para><application>gtkmm</application> is the official C++ interface
1818 for the popular GUI library <application>GTK+</application>. Highlights
1819 include typesafe callbacks, widgets extensible via inheritance and a
1820 comprehensive set of widgets. You can create user interfaces either in
1821 code or with the Glade designer, using
1822 <application>libglademm</application>.</para>
1823
1824 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1825 <listitem>
1826 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1827 url="http://www.gtkmm.org/"/></para>
1828 </listitem>
1829 <listitem>
1830 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1831 url="http://www.gtkmm.org/download.shtml"/></para>
1832 </listitem>
1833 </itemizedlist>
1834
1835 </sect4>
1836
1837 <sect4 role="package">
1838 <title>Java-GNOME</title>
1839
1840 <para><application>Java-GNOME</application> is a set of Java bindings
1841 for the <application>GNOME</application> and
1842 <application>GTK+</application> libraries that allow
1843 <application>GNOME</application> and <application>GTK+</application>
1844 applications to be written in Java. The
1845 <application>Java-GNOME</application> API has been carefully designed
1846 to be easy to use, maintaining a good OO paradigm, yet still wrapping
1847 the entire functionality of the underlying libraries.
1848 <application>Java-GNOME</application> can be used with the
1849 <application>Eclipse</application> development environment and Glade
1850 user interface designer to create applications with ease.</para>
1851
1852 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1853 <listitem>
1854 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1855 url="http://java-gnome.sourceforge.net/4.0/"/></para>
1856 </listitem>
1857 <listitem>
1858 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1859 url="http://java-gnome.sourceforge.net/4.0/get/"/></para>
1860 </listitem>
1861 </itemizedlist>
1862
1863 </sect4>
1864
1865 <sect4 role="package">
1866 <title>gtk2-perl</title>
1867
1868 <para><application>gtk2-perl</application> is the collective name for
1869 a set of Perl bindings for <application>GTK+</application> 2.x and
1870 various related libraries. These modules make it easy to write
1871 <application>GTK</application> and <application>GNOME</application>
1872 applications using a natural, Perlish, object-oriented syntax.</para>
1873
1874 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1875 <listitem>
1876 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1877 url="http://gtk2-perl.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
1878 </listitem>
1879 <listitem>
1880 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1881 url="&sourceforge-repo;/gtk2-perl"/></para>
1882 </listitem>
1883 </itemizedlist>
1884
1885 </sect4>
1886
1887 </sect3>
1888
1889 <sect3 role="package">
1890 <title>KDE Language Bindings</title>
1891
1892 <para><application>KDE</application> and most
1893 <application>KDE</application> applications are implemented using the
1894 C++ programming language, however there are number of bindings to other
1895 languages are available. These include scripting languages like
1896 <application>Perl</application>, <application>Python</application> and
1897 <application>Ruby</application>, and systems programming languages such
1898 as Java and C#.</para>
1899
1900 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1901 <listitem>
1902 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1903 url="http://developer.kde.org/language-bindings/"/></para>
1904 </listitem>
1905 </itemizedlist>
1906
1907 </sect3>
1908
1909 <sect3 role="package">
1910 <title>Numerical Python (Numpy)</title>
1911
1912 <para><application>Numerical Python</application> adds a fast array
1913 facility to the <application>Python</application> language.</para>
1914
1915 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1916 <listitem>
1917 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1918 url="http://numeric.scipy.org/"/></para>
1919 </listitem>
1920 <listitem>
1921 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1922 url="&sourceforge-repo;/numpy/"/></para>
1923 </listitem>
1924 </itemizedlist>
1925
1926 </sect3>
1927
1928 <sect3 role="package">
1929 <title>Perl Scripts and Additional Modules</title>
1930
1931 <para>There are many <application>Perl</application> scripts and
1932 additional modules located on the Comprehensive Perl Archive Network
1933 (CPAN) web site. Here you will find
1934 <quote>All Things Perl</quote>.</para>
1935
1936 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1937 <listitem>
1938 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1939 url="http://cpan.org/"/></para>
1940 </listitem>
1941 </itemizedlist>
1942
1943 </sect3>
1944
1945 <sect3 role="package">
1946 <title>SWIG</title>
1947
1948 <para><application>SWIG</application> is a software development tool
1949 that connects programs written in C and C++ with a variety of high-level
1950 programming languages. <application>SWIG</application> is used with
1951 different types of languages including common scripting languages such as
1952 <application>Perl</application>, <application>Python</application>,
1953 <application>Tcl</application>/<application>Tk</application> and
1954 <application>Ruby</application>. The list of supported languages also
1955 includes non-scripting languages such as <application>C#</application>,
1956 <application>Common Lisp</application> (Allegro CL),
1957 <application>Java</application>, <application>Modula-3</application>
1958 and <application>OCAML</application>. Also several interpreted and
1959 compiled Scheme implementations (<application>Chicken</application>,
1960 <application>Guile</application>, <application>MzScheme</application>)
1961 are supported. <application>SWIG</application> is most commonly used to
1962 create high-level interpreted or compiled programming environments, user
1963 interfaces, and as a tool for testing and prototyping C/C++ software.
1964 <application>SWIG</application> can also export its parse tree in the
1965 form of XML and Lisp s-expressions.</para>
1966
1967 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1968 <listitem>
1969 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1970 url="http://www.swig.org/"/></para>
1971 </listitem>
1972 <listitem>
1973 <para>Download Location: <ulink
1974 url="&sourceforge-repo;/swig/"/></para>
1975 </listitem>
1976 </itemizedlist>
1977
1978 </sect3>
1979
1980 </sect2>
1981
1982 <sect2>
1983 <title>Integrated Development Environments</title>
1984
1985 <sect3 role="package">
1986 <title>A-A-P</title>
1987
1988 <para><application>A-A-P</application> makes it easy to locate, download,
1989 build and install software. It also supports browsing source code,
1990 developing programs, managing different versions and distribution of
1991 software and documentation. This means that
1992 <application> A-A-P</application> is useful both for users and for
1993 developers.</para>
1994
1995 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
1996 <listitem>
1997 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
1998 url="http://www.a-a-p.org/index.html"/></para>
1999 </listitem>
2000 <listitem>
2001 <para>Download Location: <ulink
2002 url="http://www.a-a-p.org/download.html"/></para>
2003 </listitem>
2004 </itemizedlist>
2005
2006 </sect3>
2007
2008 <sect3 role="package">
2009 <title>Anjuta</title>
2010
2011 <para><application>Anujuta</application> is a versatile Integrated
2012 Development Environment (IDE) for C and C++ on GNU/Linux. It has been
2013 written for <application>GTK</application>/GNOME and features a number
2014 of advanced programming facilities. These include project management,
2015 application wizards, an on-board interactive debugger, and a powerful
2016 source editor with source browsing and syntax highlighting.</para>
2017
2018 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
2019 <listitem>
2020 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
2021 url="http://projects.gnome.org/anjuta/index.shtml"/></para>
2022 </listitem>
2023 <listitem>
2024 <para>Download Location: <ulink
2025 url="http://projects.gnome.org/anjuta/downloads.shtml"/></para>
2026 </listitem>
2027 </itemizedlist>
2028
2029 </sect3>
2030
2031 <sect3 role="package">
2032 <title>Eclipse</title>
2033
2034 <para><application>Eclipse</application> is an open source community
2035 whose projects are focused on providing an extensible development
2036 platform and application frameworks for building software.
2037 <application>Eclipse</application> contains many projects, including an
2038 Integrated Development Environment (IDE) for Java.</para>
2039
2040 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
2041 <listitem>
2042 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
2043 url="http://www.eclipse.org/"/></para>
2044 </listitem>
2045 <listitem>
2046 <para>Download Location: <ulink
2047 url="http://www.eclipse.org/downloads/"/></para>
2048 </listitem>
2049 </itemizedlist>
2050
2051 </sect3>
2052
2053 <sect3 role="package">
2054 <title>Mozart</title>
2055
2056 <para>The <application>Mozart</application> Programming System is an
2057 advanced development platform for intelligent, distributed applications.
2058 <application>Mozart</application> is based on the Oz language, which
2059 supports declarative programming, object-oriented programming, constraint
2060 programming, and concurrency as part of a coherent whole. For
2061 distribution, <application>Mozart</application> provides a true network
2062 transparent implementation with support for network awareness, openness,
2063 and fault tolerance. Security is upcoming. It is an ideal platform for
2064 both general-purpose distributed applications as well as for hard
2065 problems requiring sophisticated optimization and inferencing
2066 abilities.</para>
2067
2068 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
2069 <listitem>
2070 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
2071 url="http://www.mozart-oz.org/"/></para>
2072 </listitem>
2073 <listitem>
2074 <para>Download Location: <ulink
2075 url="http://www.mozart-oz.org/download/view.cgi"/></para>
2076 </listitem>
2077 </itemizedlist>
2078
2079 </sect3>
2080
2081 </sect2>
2082
2083 <sect2>
2084 <title>Other Development Tools</title>
2085
2086 <sect3 role="package">
2087 <title>cachecc1</title>
2088
2089 <para><application>cachecc1</application> is a
2090 <application>GCC</application> cache. It can be compared with the well
2091 known <application>ccache</application> package. It has some unique
2092 features including the use of an LD_PRELOADed shared object to catch
2093 invocations to <command>cc1</command>, <command>cc1plus</command> and
2094 <command>as</command>, it transparently supports all build methods, it
2095 can cache <application>GCC</application> bootstraps and it can be
2096 combined with <application>distcc</application> to transparently
2097 distribute compilations.</para>
2098
2099 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
2100 <listitem>
2101 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
2102 url="http://cachecc1.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
2103 </listitem>
2104 <listitem>
2105 <para>Download Location: <ulink
2106 url="&sourceforge-repo;/cachecc1"/></para>
2107 </listitem>
2108 </itemizedlist>
2109
2110 </sect3>
2111
2112 <sect3 role="package">
2113 <title>ccache</title>
2114
2115 <para><application>ccache</application> is a compiler cache. It acts as
2116 a caching pre-processor to C/C++ compilers, using the <option>-E</option>
2117 compiler switch and a hash to detect when a compilation can be satisfied
2118 from cache. This often results in 5 to 10 times faster speeds in common
2119 compilations.</para>
2120
2121 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
2122 <listitem>
2123 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
2124 url="http://ccache.samba.org/"/></para>
2125 </listitem>
2126 <listitem>
2127 <para>Download Location: <ulink
2128 url="http://samba.org/ftp/ccache/"/></para>
2129 </listitem>
2130 </itemizedlist>
2131
2132 </sect3>
2133
2134 <sect3 role="package">
2135 <title>DDD (GNU Data Display Debugger)</title>
2136
2137 <para><application>GNU DDD</application> is a graphical front-end for
2138 command-line debuggers such as <application>GDB</application>,
2139 <application>DBX</application>, <application>WDB</application>,
2140 <application>Ladebug</application>, <application>JDB</application>,
2141 <application>XDB</application>, the <application>Perl</application>
2142 debugger, the <application>Bash</application> debugger, or the
2143 <application>Python</application> debugger. Besides <quote>usual</quote>
2144 front-end features such as viewing source texts,
2145 <application>DDD</application> has an interactive graphical data display,
2146 where data structures are displayed as graphs..</para>
2147
2148 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
2149 <listitem>
2150 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
2151 url="http://www.gnu.org/software/ddd/"/></para>
2152 </listitem>
2153 <listitem>
2154 <para>Download Location: <ulink
2155 url="http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/ddd/"/></para>
2156 </listitem>
2157 </itemizedlist>
2158
2159 </sect3>
2160
2161 <sect3 role="package">
2162 <title>distcc</title>
2163
2164 <para><application>distcc</application> is a program to distribute builds
2165 of C, C++, Objective C or Objective C++ code across several machines on a
2166 network. <application>distcc</application> should always generate the
2167 same results as a local build, is simple to install and use, and is
2168 usually much faster than a local compile.
2169 <application>distcc</application> does not require all machines to share
2170 a filesystem, have synchronized clocks, or to have the same libraries or
2171 header files installed. They can even have different processors or
2172 operating systems, if cross-compilers are installed.</para>
2173
2174 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
2175 <listitem>
2176 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
2177 url="http://distcc.samba.org/"/></para>
2178 </listitem>
2179 <listitem>
2180 <para>Download Location: <ulink
2181 url="http://distcc.samba.org/download.html"/></para>
2182 </listitem>
2183 </itemizedlist>
2184
2185 </sect3>
2186
2187 <sect3 role="package">
2188 <title>Exuberant Ctags</title>
2189
2190 <para><application>Exuberant Ctags</application> generates an index (or
2191 tag) file of language objects found in source files that allows these
2192 items to be quickly and easily located by a text editor or other utility.
2193 A tag signifies a language object for which an index entry is available
2194 (or, alternatively, the index entry created for that object). Tag
2195 generation is supported for the following languages: Assembler, AWK, ASP,
2196 BETA, Bourne/Korn/Zsh Shell, C, C++, COBOL, Eiffel, Fortran, Java, Lisp,
2197 Lua, Make, Pascal, Perl, PHP, Python, REXX, Ruby, S-Lang, Scheme, Tcl,
2198 Vim, and YACC. A list of editors and tools utilizing tag files may be
2199 found at <ulink url="http://ctags.sourceforge.net/tools.html"/>.</para>
2200
2201 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
2202 <listitem>
2203 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
2204 url="http://ctags.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
2205 </listitem>
2206 <listitem>
2207 <para>Download Location: <ulink
2208 url="&sourceforge-repo;/ctags/"/></para>
2209 </listitem>
2210 </itemizedlist>
2211
2212 </sect3>
2213
2214 <sect3 role="package">
2215 <title>GDB (GNU Debugger)</title>
2216
2217 <para><application>GDB</application> is the GNU Project debugger. It
2218 allows you to see what is going on <quote>inside</quote> another program
2219 while it executes. It also allows you to see what another program was
2220 doing at the moment it crashed.</para>
2221
2222 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
2223 <listitem>
2224 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
2225 url="http://www.gnu.org/software/gdb/"/></para>
2226 </listitem>
2227 <listitem>
2228 <para>Download Location: <ulink
2229 url="ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gdb/"/></para>
2230 </listitem>
2231 </itemizedlist>
2232
2233 <para condition="html" role="usernotes">User Notes and Installation
2234 Instructions: <ulink url="&blfs-wiki;/OtherProgrammingTools"/></para>
2235
2236 </sect3>
2237
2238 <sect3 role="package">
2239 <title>gocache (GNU Object Cache)</title>
2240
2241 <para><application>ccache</application> is a clone of
2242 <application>ccache</application>, with the goal of supporting
2243 compilers other than <application>GCC</application> and adding additional
2244 features. Embedded compilers will especially be in focus.</para>
2245
2246 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
2247 <listitem>
2248 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
2249 url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/gocache/"/></para>
2250 </listitem>
2251 <listitem>
2252 <para>Download Location: <ulink
2253 url="&sourceforge-repo;/gocache/"/></para>
2254 </listitem>
2255 </itemizedlist>
2256
2257 </sect3>
2258
2259 <sect3 role="package">
2260 <title>OProfile</title>
2261
2262 <para><application>OProfile</application> is a system-wide profiler for
2263 Linux systems, capable of profiling all running code at low overhead.
2264 <application>OProfile</application> is released under the GNU GPL. It
2265 consists of a kernel driver and a daemon for collecting sample data, and
2266 several post-profiling tools for turning data into information.
2267 <application>OProfile</application> leverages the hardware performance
2268 counters of the CPU to enable profiling of a wide variety of interesting
2269 statistics, which can also be used for basic time-spent profiling. All
2270 code is profiled: hardware and software interrupt handlers, kernel
2271 modules, the kernel, shared libraries, and applications.
2272 <application>OProfile</application> is currently in alpha status; however
2273 it has proven stable over a large number of differing configurations. It
2274 is being used on machines ranging from laptops to 16-way NUMA-Q
2275 boxes.</para>
2276
2277 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
2278 <listitem>
2279 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
2280 url="http://oprofile.sourceforge.net/news/"/></para>
2281 </listitem>
2282 <listitem>
2283 <para>Download Location: <ulink
2284 url="http://oprofile.sourceforge.net/download/"/></para>
2285 </listitem>
2286 </itemizedlist>
2287
2288 </sect3>
2289
2290 <sect3 role="package">
2291 <title>SCons</title>
2292
2293 <para><application>SCons</application> is an Open Source software
2294 construction tool, i.e, a next-generation build tool. Think of
2295 <application>SCons</application> as an improved, cross-platform
2296 substitute for the classic <command>make</command> utility with
2297 integrated functionality similar to
2298 <application>Autoconf</application>/<application>Automake</application>
2299 and compiler caches such as <command>ccache</command>.</para>
2300
2301 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
2302 <listitem>
2303 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
2304 url="http://scons.sourceforge.net/"/></para>
2305 </listitem>
2306 <listitem>
2307 <para>Download Location: <ulink
2308 url="&sourceforge-repo;/scons/"/></para>
2309 </listitem>
2310 </itemizedlist>
2311
2312 </sect3>
2313
2314 <sect3 role="package">
2315 <title>strace</title>
2316
2317 <para><application>strace</application> is a system call tracer, i.e., a
2318 debugging tool which prints out a trace of all the system calls made by
2319 another process or program.</para>
2320
2321 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
2322 <listitem>
2323 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
2324 url="http://sourceforge.net/projects/strace/"/></para>
2325 </listitem>
2326 <listitem>
2327 <para>Download Location: <ulink
2328 url="&sourceforge-repo;/strace/"/></para>
2329 </listitem>
2330 </itemizedlist>
2331
2332 </sect3>
2333
2334 <sect3 role="package">
2335 <title>Valgrind</title>
2336
2337 <para><application>Valgrind</application> is a collection of five tools:
2338 two memory error detectors, a thread error detector, a cache profiler and
2339 a heap profiler used for debugging and profiling Linux programs. Features
2340 include automatic detection of many memory management and threading bugs
2341 as well as detailed profiling to speed up and reduce memory use of your
2342 programs.</para>
2343
2344 <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
2345 <listitem>
2346 <para>Project Home Page: <ulink
2347 url="http://valgrind.org/"/></para>
2348 </listitem>
2349 <listitem>
2350 <para>Download Location: <ulink
2351 url="http://valgrind.org/downloads/source_code.html"/></para>
2352 </listitem>
2353 </itemizedlist>
2354
2355 </sect3>
2356
2357 </sect2>
2358
2359</sect1>
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