Ocaml version >= 4.13.1, modules fmt,str and linenoise ( REPL )
opam install fmt str linenoise
Automatic download of the linux x86_64 binaries
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/coco33920/ocaml-baguettesharp-interpreter/master/download.sh | sh
the script downloads the latest binaries (which was tagged on the releases), install it as ~/.local/bin/baguette_sharp
and flag it as executable. You can also do
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/coco33920/ocaml-baguettesharp-interpreter/master/download.sh
sh download.sh
Or just executing the script itself
wget https://github.com/coco33920/ocaml-baguettesharp-interpreter/releases/latest/download/baguette.linux64
mv baguette.linux64 ~/.local/bin/baguette_sharp
chmod +x ~/.local/bin/baguette_sharp
Build the latest stable version in OPAM repositories opam install baguette_sharp
it compile and install the latest
baguette_sharp version under baguette_sharp.repl
in OPAM files (which are in $PATH
)
You must install the dependencies to build from sources, which are fmt
and linenoise
. And an OCaml version of at least 4.13.1.
An automatic script to download sources, install dependencies and build from source is available here :
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/coco33920/ocaml-baguettesharp-interpreter/master/automatic.sh | sh
Which is exactly :
opam install -y linenoise fmt
git clone https://github.com/coco33920/ocaml-baguettesharp-interpreter
cd ocaml-baguettesharp-interpreter
dune build @install
dune install
The script, same as OPAM, install the repl under baguette_sharp.repl
in the OPAM files.
I restarted this project early 2022, to act as a TIPE (a french weird oral exam for the concours of Écoles d'Ingénieurs) to frame the formal language theory, and to do that you'll play with our world famous pastries !
The lexer, parser and interpreter are finished, they take a string of language and transform it into an abstract syntax tree (AST) that the interpreter take to execute the language. I now work on the theoritical part of the issue (turing-completeness), and the compiler.
The syntax is really close to a BASIC but with less explicit words and keywords you'll see :)
The language supports integers, floating point numbers, strings, booleans, predicates, gotos, conditionnals gotos (if/else), and implements many of the standard instructions you can find in a language standard library. Keywords are simple and are the only instances when you don't need parenthesis, go see the WIKI for more accurate informations
dune build .
dune exec baguette_sharp_interpreter
dune runtest