You have some way to go. It may be helpful to take a look at our
course on compiler construction, in which we explain how to use the
various tools we have built to build compilers and interpreters.
I suggest you download the code and the tools and the lecture notes,
and start to try to make some of the exercises. Our students somehow
manage ;-}
http://www.cs.uu.nl/wiki/Ipt/WebHome
Doaitse Swierstra
On 2006 jan 25, at 17:23, Bulat Ziganshin wrote:
Hello Jules,
Wednesday, January 25, 2006, 12:29:48 AM, you wrote:
JJ> I would like to create a scripting language, similar to Ruby,
Perl and
JJ> Python. Pugs, written in Haskell, is a Perl6 implementation. Is
Haskell a
JJ> good choice for me?
yes, if you ready to learn many new things. Haskell is very different
from non-FP languages
JJ> I have no experience with Haskell (yet), but I like the
JJ> concept of functional programming. Because Haskell will
probably be too slow
JJ> for the final implementation, I will have to rewrite it in C or
maybe D.
i'm not sure that you will not change your plans. may be sometime you
will prefer to rewrite existing Haskell implemetations just to make
your interpreter faster ;)
JJ> Haskell can be very useful as a test/prototype implementation,
where speed
JJ> is not very important. But will I be able to create a clean,
and easy to
JJ> understand implementation in Haskell?
if speed is not main goal - definitely yes
JJ> The scripting language will be object
JJ> oriented, and imperative. Is that a problem because Haskell is
functional,
JJ> or is there be an obvious and nice way to implement an
imperative scripting
JJ> language?
it's no problem at all
JJ> The language is very dynamic, and the source-tree needs to be
in memory
JJ> because it is modifiable at run-time.
JJ> Would it be good to do this in Haskell, and port it to C if I
like the
JJ> implementation, or start in C? Keep the parser/lexer for the
source code in
JJ> Haskell, but port only the interpreter to C?
yes, you can use C and Haskell together. but C code can't walk Haskell
data structures, so such co-working will need some manual work
JJ> What would be a good place to start? I am reading Yet Another
Haskell
JJ> tutorial, and I've read the first 6 of two dozen lessons in
Haskell. What to
JJ> do next, practice/read more/start with the implementation of
the scripting
JJ> language?
read about parsec library and start :) this lib already contains
several examples of implementing small FP and imperative languages,
each implemetation is just 5-10 kb in size
--
Best regards,
Bulat mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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