Please allow me to to blurb the following, which is related to several 
discussions at FONC:

Our web site http://subscript-lang.org went officially live last Saturday. 
SubScript is a way to extend common programming languages, aimed to ease event 
handling and concurrency. Typical application areas are GUI controllers, text 
processing applications and discrete event simulations. SubScript is based on a 
mathematical concurrency theory named Algebra of Communicating Processes (ACP).

ACP is a 30 year old branch of mathematics, as solid as numeric algebra and as 
boolean algebra. In fact, you can regard ACP as an extension to boolean algebra 
with 'things that can happen'. These items are glued together with operations 
such alternative, sequential and parallel compositions. This way ACP combines 
the essence of compiler-compilers and notions of parallelism.

Adding ACP to a common programming language yields a lightweight alternative 
for threading concurrency. It also brings the 50 year old but still magic 
expressiveness of languages for parser generators and compiler compilers, so 
that SubScript suits language processing. The nondeterministic style combined 
with concurrency support happens to be very useful for programming GUI 
controllers. Surprisingly, ACP with a few extras even enables data flow style 
programming, like you have with pipes in Unix shell language.

For instance, to program a GUI controller for a simple search application takes 
about 15 lines of code in Java or Scala, if you do threading well. In SubScript 
it is only 5 lines; see 
http://subscript-lang.org/examples/a-simple-gui-application/

At the moment SubScript is being implemented as an extension to the programming 
language Scala; other languages, such as C, C++, C#, Java and JavaScript, would 
be possible too. The current state of the implementation is mature enough for 
experimentation by language researchers, but not yet for real application 
development. If you have the Eclipse environment with the Scala plugin 
installed, it is easy to get SubScript running with the example applications 
from our Google Code project.

We hope this announcement will raise interest from programming language 
researchers, and that some developers will get aboard on the project.

In the second half of February 2013 we will very probably give a presentation 
and a hands on workshop at EPFL in Lausanne, the place where Scala is 
developed. We hope have a SubScript compiler ready then, branched from the 
Scala compiler scalac. A more detailed announcement will follow by the end of 
January on our site.


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