Hypercubed / f-flat-minor

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f-flat-minor

f-flat-minor (F♭m for short) is a tiny toy language and baby brother to f-flat. It is meant to be a tiny stack-oriented language used for learning new languages. The challenge is to implement f-flat-minor in as many languages as possible within the rules listed below.

The Rules

  • Minimal dependencies (standard library for each language)
  • Parsing should be as simple as splitting on whitespace.
  • The stack should consist of only big integers.
  • Each implementation should generate and execute the same "bytecode".
  • Each implementation should generate the same output.

The Approach

For each target language first implement a proof-of-concept interpreter either in this repo of in an online code runner (replit for example). Then, if satisfied, built a full fledged a compiler and runner within this repo. Each language should run the example above and pass the test suite; possibly with the help of a preprocessor.

Progress

Language Support Interpreter "ByteCode" REPL
Typescript/Deno F♭m+
Go F♭m+
Racket F♭m+
Python F♭m
Ruby F♭m
Dart F♭m
AssemblyScript F♭m
C++ F♭mo
Rust F♭mo
Swift F♭m-
Wolfram Language F♭m-
Haskell F♭m-
WASM (wat) F♭m-
Julia
LLVM
F#
Lua
Erlang/BEAM
Perl/Raku
Java/Scala/Kotlin/JVM
Forth/Factor/Cat
F-flat

The Language

f-flat-minor is a minimal implementation of f-flat.

F♭m vs F-flat

While F♭m code looks very similar to F-flat code they are almost opposite in their philosophy. The main concept of F-flat is that all system defined words should apply logically to all data types. For example + operator is addition, concatenation, or logical OR depending on the data types. In F♭m there is only one data type (big integer) and, therefore, all operators have one meaning. Even with that limitation the resulting language is very similar.

Features

  • Only one type (big integer)
  • Only one data stack
  • One return stack (many implementations use the queue as a return stack)
  • Minimal set of system instructions, no scopes
  • "Infinite" stack and user vocabulary
  • Compiles to "bytecode" (actually base64 VLQ encoded big integers)

Since the data stack consists of only big integers, each value can be both a number or a pointer to an operation (either system or user defined). Programming in f-flat-minor is done by pushing values onto the data stack and then calling an operation. These includes operations that extends the vocabulary of the language. The built-in operations and core vocabulary are similar to it's older brother f-flat inspired by HP RPL, Forth, Joy, Factor, XY and others.

I won't cover the basics of stack based contaminative programming here. The system vocabulary below is similar to other such languages. See here and here for more information on concatenative and Stack-oriented programming languages. Briefly, f-flat-minor has no variables, only instructions that manipulate the stack, the queue, and the vocabulary. For example 6 7 dup * - results in -43 on the bottom of the stack. The command . prints the stack to the terminal.

Note: In this doc I refer to operations occurring on the "bottom" of the data stack. When printed the stack is printed left to right as top to bottom. For the queue, words are executed left to right (from top to bottom), the tail of the queue is last and is often uses as the return stack.

F♭mo

The most basic implementations of f-flat-minor (dubbed F♭mo) has a limited vocabulary necessary to calculate the factorial of 100.

Note: F♭m- indicates a version that lacks big integer support or otherwise not fully implemented.

[(fact)] : dup 1 - fact * ;
[fact] : dup 1 - [(fact)] ? ;

100 fact .

with the following output:

[ 93326215443944152681699238856266700490715968264381621468592963895217599993229915608941463976156518286253697920827223758251185210916864000000000000000000000000 ]
  • Values - When a token is encountered that can be parsed as a integer, that value is pushed to the stack. All other tokens are considered to be words.

  • Booleans - There is not a boolean type in f-flat-minor. Instead, 0 is interpreted as false and all other values are truthy.

  • Words - When a token is encountered that is not a number, the operation is called with the stack (and queue) as its arguments. Words can use any non-whitespace character but note the special definitions for words starting with ', [, or . and ending with : below.

  • Pointers - When a word is encountered that starts with an [ symbol the operation is not called but instead the numeric value of the operation is pushed to the stack. For example [+] eval is the same 43 eval which is the same as as calling + directly. If a token is encountered that is not a known word or a definition a new pointer is pushed to the stack. If the executer attempts to evaluate a pointer that is not a valid operation the executer will throw an error.

  • Definitions - The words : and ; indicate a definition. A definition is started with : and terminated by ;. The definition is removed from the stack (or queue depending on specific implementation) and assigned to the last symbol on the stack (before :). Definitions cannot be mutated or overridden.

F♭m

F♭m adds compiler sugar for comments, strings, and quotes as well as additional words (shown in the table below).

/* factorial */

fact: dup 1 > [ dup 1 - fact * ] ? ;

/* string printing */

(prints): dup [ q< (prints) q> putc ] ? ;
prints: (prints) drop ;

0 'Factorial' 32 '100:' 10 prints

100 fact .

with the following output:

Factorial 100:
[ 93326215443944152681699238856266700490715968264381621468592963895217599993229915608941463976156518286253697920827223758251185210916864000000000000000000000000 ]
  • Definition Shorthand - Words ending with a colon (:) push a symbol to the stack and the word : to the queue. As such word: a b c ; is sugar for [word] : a b c ;

  • Quotes - The words [ and ] indicate a quote. When the word [ is encountered, words between the brackets are not executed. When the word ] is encountered the words between the brackets are popped off the stack (or queue depending on specific implementation) and stored as an unnamed word and it's pointer is pushed to the stack. This is very similar to a definition expect a pointer is left on the stack. Unlike a definition, quotes can be nested. Notice that white space inside the quotes are required.

Note: [ word ] and [word] behave similarly. However, [ word ] is a quote and [word] is a pointer. [ word ] adds an extra user definition. An optimized compiler can convert [ word ] to [word].

  • Strings - When the compiler/interpreter encounters a string (a sequence of non-white space characters starting with single quote ') it will push the string's characters onto the data stack (trailing quote, if present is ignored). Since the parsing of f-flat-minor is done by splitting on all whitespace, the string cannot have whitespace but can include escape sequences such as \s, \n for space and newline respectively.

  • Comments - All text between a /* and */ is ignored. Comments cannot be nested.

Vocabulary

See F♭m by example for a more detailed explanation of the vocabulary.

Mnemonic Syntax Op (Ascii) Version
NOP nop 0 (null) F♭m
EVAL eval 1 F♭m
PUTC putc 2 F♭m
GETC getc 3 F♭m
PUTN putn 5 F♭m
CLOCK clock 6 F♭m
DROP drop 8 (backspace) F♭m
PUSHR q< 14 F♭m
PULLR q> 15 F♭m
SHIFTL << 16 F♭m
SHIFTR >> 17 F♭m
CLR clr 24 F♭m
RAND rand 26 F♭m
EXIT exit 27 (ESC) F♭m
DUP dup 33 (!) F♭mo
DEPTH depth 35 (#) F♭m
SWAP swap 36 ($) F♭m
MOD % 37 (%) F♭m
AND & 38 (&) F♭m
STASH ( 40 (() F♭m
FETCH ) 41 ()) F♭m
MUL * 42 (*) F♭mo
ADD + 43 (+) F♭mo
SUB - 45 (-) F♭mo
DUMP . 46 (.) F♭mo
DIV / 47 (/) F♭mo
MARK : 58 (:) F♭mo
DEF ; 59 (;) F♭mo
LT < 60 (<) F♭m
EQ = 61 (=) F♭m
GT > 62 (>) F♭m
WHEN ? 63 (?) F♭mo
BRA [ 91 ([) F♭m
KET ] 93 (]) F♭m
POW ^ 94 (^) F♭m
OR | 124 (|) F♭m
NOT ~ 126 (~) F♭m

F♭m+

F♭m+ adds a preprocessor and compiler commands. A word starting with a period . (other than . itself) is a compiler or preprocessor command. Unlike other words the compiler/preprocessor commands are never pushed to the stack. If an implementation does not support a compiler/preprocessor command it should ignore it. The following commands are supported:

Command Description Support
.load loads another file in place Deno, Go and Racket
.include loads another file in place only once (same as .load except a file will not be imported twice) Deno, Go and Racket
.m macro command, the rest of the line will be executed at compile time and included in the output. Deno, Go
.inline indicates that a previous definition is safe for inlining (using during optimization) Deno
.unsafe indicates that a previous definition is not safe for inlining (using during optimization) Deno

Standard Library and Preprocessor

core.ff Contains definitions of commonly used F♭m words. This can be included in other files by using the .load or .import command in implementations that support F♭m+ (currently Deno, Go, and Racket). By convention F♭m files that require the preprocessor have the .ffp extension. For implementations that don't support F♭m+ compiler commands, the source file can be preprocessed using Deno or Racket versions. Example:

./deno/build/preprocess my_file.ffp | ./ccp/build/run

or

./racket/main.rkt --pp-only ./ff/fact.ffp | ./python/execute.py

Building, Testing and Benchmarking

For build and testing we use chomp. To build all projects run:

chomp build:

Note: you'll need to setup development tools for each project first.

or to build only one project run:

chomp build:{name}

Where {name} is the name of the project (i.e. deno, cpp, racket).

To test all projects run:

chomp test:

or to test only one project run:

chomp test:{name}

For benchmarking run you will need to install hyperfine then run:

chomp bench

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details

About

License:MIT License


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