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A minimalistic but complete standard Forth compiler in C
MinForth V3.4 is a classic Forth system with command-line interface. Development resource requirements are minimal. A source text editor and a C compiler are sufficient. By design no toolchain is required to adapt or rebuild MinForth. A complete rebuild takes only few seconds. Current sources are for Windows and Linux (32-bit or 64-bit).
MinForth primitive definitions are written in mixed Forth and C language and are transpiled to pure C code.
C-like language parser, bytecode generator and a VM
Project aims to implement a C-like language interpreter with small code and memory footprint for 32bit microcontrollers.
At the time of writing, parser code size for Cortex-M3 is less than 10K and VM is less than 3K. RAM requirements mostly depend on code size and complexity, but few kilobytes should be enough to handle most reasonably simple cases.
Parser and VM are written with code size priority, not security. Project should not be used to run code (and bytecode) from untrusted sources.
Abstrasy is a programming language inspired by LISP and SCHEME. It is easy to learn and offers a revised syntax for application requirements and improve its readability. It is implemented as a script interpreter (programmed in Java based).
A simple metalanguage for defining new concepts easily on any level: analysis, requirements, design and implementation (any programming language), and transformations to produce lower level concepts (working software) from higher level concepts.