flpc
forthlisp
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flpc
- Forth vs Lisp
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SubX: A minimalist assembly language for a subset of the x86 ISA
> I've actually never considered putting the comment first! I'll have to think about that one.
I'm sure there are many competing constraints so definitely don't do it because I'm suggesting this on a whim. :) My reasoning is that as a human reader, the comment is the more readable part, so I'd want to see it first. And for a computer, it probably doesn't care if the op code appears first or not.
> You probably don't want to understand Haskell's loop fusion by comparing source and generated code.
Indeed. But even though C and Haskell are very different, I think they share a common philosophy about compilation where you can basically do whatever you want as long as it still produces the same result.
I vaguely remember looking at Python generate bytecode (with `dis.dis`) and seeing it wasn't too bad. I haven't tried it on a larger program though.
There's tcc (and more recently chibicc that I haven't had a chance to check out yet) that you're probably already aware of. Is the generated output still pretty bad.
I'll also throw my own attempt in the ring
- High level https://github.com/asrp/flpc/blob/master/lib/stage0.flpc
forthlisp
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Bunch of questions about forth
Examples of minimal Lisp in Forth: - https://github.com/schani/forthlisp - https://github.com/mschuldt/raillisp
- Forth vs Lisp
- Lisp in Forth
- Has anyone used Forth to write Common Lisp?
What are some alternatives?
maru - Maru - a tiny self-hosting lisp dialect
waforth - Small but complete dynamic Forth Interpreter/Compiler for and in WebAssembly
ruby - The Ruby Programming Language [mirror]
raillisp - A fast and portable lisp implemented in forth
cosmopolitan - build-once run-anywhere c library
eulex - A straightforward standalone Forth implementation for x86.
paip-lisp - Lisp code for the textbook "Paradigms of Artificial Intelligence Programming"
collapseos - Bootstrap post-collapse technology
ESP32forth - FORTH developments for ESP32
Mako - A simple virtual game console
ok - An open-source interpreter for the K5 programming language.
jonesforth - Mirror of JONESFORTH