113 lines
4.8 KiB
Markdown
113 lines
4.8 KiB
Markdown
# The Ivo Programming Language
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Ivo (IPA: /aɪvoʊ/) is a programming language intended
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as a tool for its author to explore interesting programming language features.
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Ivo is currently in a very early stage of development
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and most likely is not of any practical or academic interest;
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however, that may change in the future.
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This README serves to document the language as it currently stands,
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not what the language one day hopes to be.
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## Using the Ivo interpreter
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You may run the Ivo interpreter using `stack run`;
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the interpreter does not take any arguments.
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Type in your command, definition, or expression at the prompt: `>> `.
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Expressions will be typechecked, evaluated using call-by-value, and then printed.
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Exit the prompt with `Ctrl-d` (or equivalent).
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### Interpreter commands
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These commands are available:
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* `:clear`: Clear all of your variable definitions.
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* `:load <filename>`:
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Execute a file containing Ivo definitions and expressions in the interpreter.
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Variables already defined in the interpreter will be defined in the file;
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variables defined by the file will be defined in the interpreter.
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The filename may contain spaces, but trailing whitespace will be trimmed.
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* `:check <on/off> <always/decls/off>`:
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* If the first argument is `on`,
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then expressions will only be evaluated and definitions will only be added
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only if typechecking succeeds.
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* If the second argument is `always`, then inferred types will always be printed;
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if it is `decls`, then only the inferred types of declarations will be printed;
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otherwise, the type of expressions are never printed.'
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* The default values are `on` `decls`.
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* `:trace <off/local/global>`:
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* If the argument is `local`, intermediate expressions will be printed
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as they are evaluated;
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* If the argument is `global`, the *entire* expression will be printed
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with each evaluation step.
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* The default value is `off`.
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## The Ivo language
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### Syntax
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The parser's error messages currently are virtually useless, so be very careful with your syntax.
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* Variable names: any sequence of letters.
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* Function application: `f x y`
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* Lambda abstraction: `\x y z. E` or `λx y z. E`
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* Let expressions: `let x = E; y = F in G`
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* Or letrec expressions, which can only define variable,
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but which can be self-referential: `letrec x = ... x ... in E`
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* Parenthetical expressions: `(E)`
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* Constructors: `()`, `(x, y)` (or `(,) x y`), `Left x`, `Right y`, `Z`, `S`, `[]`, `(x :: xs)` (or `(:) x xs`), `Char n`.
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* The parentheses around the cons constructor are not optional.
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* `Char` takes a natural number and turns it into a character.
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* Pattern matchers: `{ Left a -> e ; Right y -> f }`
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* Pattern matchers can be applied like functions, e.g. `{ Z -> x, S -> y } 10` reduces to `y`.
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* Patterns must use the regular form of the constructor, e.g. `(x :: xs)` and not `((::) x xs)`.
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* There are no nested patterns or default patterns.
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* Incomplete pattern matches will crash the interpreter.
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* Literals: `1234`, `[e, f, g, h]`, `'a`, `"abc"`
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* Strings are represented as lists of characters.
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* Type annotations: there are no type annotations; types are inferred only.
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* Comments: `// line comment`, `/* block comment */`
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Top-level contexts (e.g. the REPL or a source code file)
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allow declarations (`let(rec) x = E` without multiple definitions `in ...`),
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which make your definitions available for the rest of the program's execution.
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You must separate your declarations and expressions with `;`.
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### Types
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Types are checked/inferred using the Hindley-Milner type inference algorithm.
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* Functions: `a -> b` (constructed by `\x. e`)
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* Products: `a * b` (constructed by `(x, y)`)
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* Unit: `★` (constructed by `()`)
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* Sums: `a + b` (constructed by `Left x` or `Right y`)
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* Bottom: `⊥` (currently useless because incomplete patterns are allowed)
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* The natural numbers: `Nat` (constructed by `Z` and `S`)
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* Lists: `List a` (constructed by `[]` and `(x :: xs)`)
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* Characters: `Char` (constructed by `Char`, which takes a `Nat`)
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* Universal quantification (forall): `∀a b. t`
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### Builtins
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Builtins are variables that correspond with a built-in language feature
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that cannot be replicated by user-written code.
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They still are just variables though; they do not receive special syntactic treatment.
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* `callcc : ∀a b. (((a -> b) -> a) -> a)`:
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[the call-with-current-continuation control flow operator](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Call-with-current-continuation).
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Continuations are printed as `λ!. ... ! ...`, like a lambda abstraction
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with an argument named `!` which is used exactly once;
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however, continuations are *not* the same as lambda abstractions
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because they perform the side effect of modifying the current continuation,
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and this is *not* valid syntax you can enter into the REPL.
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### Example code
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You can see some example code in `examples/examples.ivo`.
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