language-incubator
ti84-forth
language-incubator | ti84-forth | |
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2 | 3 | |
56 | 83 | |
- | - | |
5.6 | 0.0 | |
about 1 month ago | about 3 years ago | |
Rust | Assembly | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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language-incubator
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Jonesforth – A sometimes minimal FORTH compiler and tutorial (2007)
It was a lot of fun for me to reimplement this in MIPS assembler on CI20 [0]
JonesForth could be more straightforward in its interpreter part. I tried to make this part as clean as possible, hopefully did not miss anything.
Maybe I will make a RISCV version in my copious free time in the future.
[0] https://github.com/EarlGray/language-incubator/blob/29755c32...
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Ask HN: What are some interesting examples of Prolog?
Not exactly a big codebase, but it was a revelation for me how natural typecheckers can feel in Prolog: I basically rewrote typing rules with some tweaks: [1]
Also, tests were surprisingly enjoyable in Prolog: [2].
[1] https://github.com/EarlGray/language-incubator/blob/29755c32...
ti84-forth
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The Zen of Forth
Forth also requires very minimal resources to implement which can be fun in constrained environments. Here it is on a TI-84+ calculator[0] or even a computer in The Powder Toy.[1]
The runtime design is a little quirky but straightforward and you can extend the system as you execute (or even change interpreter semantics), or add optimizations such as some form of JIT quite easily.
[0] https://github.com/siraben/ti84-forth
[1] https://github.com/siraben/r216-forth
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Jonesforth – A sometimes minimal FORTH compiler and tutorial (2007)
Some time ago I wrote an implementation of Forth that runs on the TI-84+ and TI-83+ calculators directly inspired by Jonesforth.[0] It runs under TI-OS as well, but the amount of available space is somewhat limited. On another implementation I wrote[1] you have full access to the calculator hardware and memory from Forth.
[0] https://github.com/siraben/ti84-forth
[1] https://github.com/siraben/zkeme80
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TI-84 Plus CE Python Graphing Calculator
On the TI-84+, assembly programs still work and it's still a test-approved device. I wrote a Forth interpreter[0] that can interop with the syscalls as well
[0] https://github.com/siraben/ti84-forth
What are some alternatives?
libredwg - Official mirror of libredwg. With CI hooks and nightly releases. PR's ok
SymPy - A computer algebra system written in pure Python
precautionary - Patient-centered safety diagnostics for oncology dose-escalation trials, examining design safety in light of inter-individual variation in PKPD.
Ndless - The TI-Nspire calculator extension for native applications
dfs-tools - Distributional Formal Semantics (DFS) tools
jonesforth_riscv - Jonesforth RISC-V port.
the-constitution-of-japan
TI84-Wordle - Wordle for the TI84 Plus CE graphing calculator.
kOS-KASM - Kerbal Assembler, for use with Kerbal OS mod for Kerbal Space Program. Using this tool one can program their KSP rockets in assembly code, or generate this assembly code from a compiler. Assembles directly to kRISC with no need for KerboScript.
KnightOS - OS for z80 calculators
foth - Tutorial-style FORTH implementation written in golang
v200 - A TI Voyage-200 emulator