kitten
gale
Our great sponsors
kitten | gale | |
---|---|---|
13 | 1 | |
1,074 | 12 | |
- | - | |
1.2 | 6.1 | |
about 1 year ago | 9 months ago | |
Haskell | Zig | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | BSD Zero Clause License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
kitten
-
Retro: A Modern, Pragmatic Forth
While not quite a Forth, Kitten is a stack language:
https://kittenlang.org/
- Atunci când cauți de muncă și nu te mai angajează nimeni
-
Stack-based array-friendly static-typed proof of concept
Since you're making a statically-typed concatenative language, I'll point you to a joy reference, kitten, notes to motivate type checking stack languages, and a paper that formalizes type checking for stack languages. Since this looks like a relatively high-level stack language (given the presence of ADTs), you may find that you want to add quotes to your language, specifically opaque quotes since your language is typed. In that case, you'll realize that you'll need a better way to formulate polymorphism over stacks, and the paper on type checking will provide that to you.
-
A Forth Apologia
Well, there is Kitten, although it hasn't seen an update in two years and was moving quite slowly before that too.
https://kittenlang.org/
- main repo
-
Why Concatenative Programming Matters
Author ended up doing a lot of work on Kitten https://github.com/evincarofautumn/kitten
- The Kitten Programming Language
-
my cat is installing debian 10
Kitten lang
-
I much prefer `data.action()` to `action(data). Is it an r/unpopularopinion?
You may like https://kittenlang.org/
gale
-
Retro: A Modern, Pragmatic Forth
I'm slowly working on one. The repo is a mess and the examples don't actually run (they're sketches of where I'm trying to go; the unit tests in the Zig source are a better idea of where I'm actually at so far), but I'm attempting to slap a "minimum viable "does this shape align with this other shape" type of type system" onto a loosely-FORTH-inspired stack machine with some modern amenities with Gale. https://sr.ht/~klardotsh/gale/ (or for the GitHub fans, https://github.com/klardotsh/gale)
What are some alternatives?
JDK - JDK main-line development https://openjdk.org/projects/jdk
bog - Small, strongly typed, embeddable language.
jvm-parser - A Haskell parser for JVM bytecode files
mstoical - MStoical - a Forth like language, but better
mlatu - A declarative concatenative programming language
ActorForth - A strongly typed Forth-like language ultimately intended to target cryptoledgers and support an Actor concurrency model. Initially implemented in Python, now switched to modern C++.
haskell-exp-parser - Simple parser parser from Haskell to TemplateHaskell expressions
LoLa - LoLa is a small programming language meant to be embedded into games.
resin - Vector space search engine. Available as a HTTP service or as an embedded library.
Vyxal - A code-golfing language experience that has aspects of traditional programming languages - terse, elegant, readable.
egison-quote - Quasi quotes for Egison expression
discussion - Discussion repository for Forth enthusiasts.