@hackage snail0.1.1.0

A programming language with no semantics

Snail

A no-semantics programming language for gastropods.

Why?

My colleagues and I are going to start working through Types and Progamming Languages. In the book you implement languages of varying feature sets. The book implements these languages in OCaml, however I had this Lisp parser essentially ready for awhile. There are a handful of "Write you a Scheme Interpreters"-like tutorials and they all use a parser relatively similar to this one. However, there are some pretty subtle issues with most of the ones I have seen. For example, the two examples below parse as two lexemes in a lot of examples. Even Haskell's parser has this issue!

(1a)
(1 a)

Is this really a programming language?

From the "Programming language" wikipedia page,

A programming language is a system of notation for writing computer programs.

The description of a programming language is usually split into the two components of syntax (form) and semantics (meaning)

Snail is used for writing interpreters or compilers. However, it doesn't define any semantics. So, maybe?

Syntax (form)

Snail describes valid lexemes, text literals, and s-expressions. The valid lexemes are approximately from R5RS Scheme but this may change in the future. We also use Haskell's line and block comments. Here is a valid snail program,

-- Prints `hello "world"` to the console
(print "hello \"world\"")

-- Prints 3 to the console
(print (+ 1 2))

{-
  Defines a function to add two numbers
  Applies the function to generate 3
  Prints 3 to the console
-}
(let
  (f (lambda (x y) (+ x y)))
  (print (f 2 1)))

(quote hello)

(nil)

(print true)

(print false)

-- end comment

Reminder, this program has no semantics. It is your job to take Snail's Abstract Syntax Tree (AST) and define the semantics of an interpreter or compiler.

Getting the AST

You can see some examples in test/Snail/IOSpec.hs, but you can put your snail program into some file, let's say hello.snail. The following Haskell will print the AST or print a failure,

module Main where

import Snail

main :: IO ()
main = do
  eResults <- readSnailFile "./hello.snail"
  case eResults of
    Right ast -> print ast
    Left failureString -> print failureString