Tree @rel_2_0_2025_0120 (Download .tar.gz)
Burro
Try it online @ catseye.tc | Wiki entry @ esolangs.org | See also: Tandem
This is the reference distribution for Burro, a formal programming language whose programs form a group (an algebraic structure from group theory). The precise sense of this statement is explained in the accompanying document The Sense in which Burro Programs form a Group, but the following can be taken as a high-level summary: For every Burro program text, there exists an "annihilator" program text which, when concatenated to the original program text, forms a "no-op" program.
The current version of the Burro language is 2.0, and is defined by the
Literate Haskell file Language/Burro/Definition.lhs
in the src
directory, which also serves as the reference implementation
of the language.
Note: In some repository viewers (such as Codeberg), viewing the contents of the
directory src/Language/Burro/
will rendering the definition with the Markdown formatting within the Literate
Haskell file nicely formatted, making it more readable.
History
- 2005: The author, already familiar with brainfuck and starting to learn about group theory and seeing some similarities between them, gets some ideas about how they could be combined.
- 2007: Burro language version 1.0 is released. Its documentation
can still be found in the file
doc/burro-1.0.md
. - 2010(?): It is noticed and pointed out by ais523 and others that the set of Burro 1.0 programs does not actually form a group.
- 2010: Burro language version 2.0 is designed and released, along with a proof that its programs do form a group, and a proof that the language is Turing-complete.
- June 2020: A more mathematical explanation of the sense in which Burro programs form a group is written up. It can be found in the document The Sense in which Burro Programs form a Group.
- July 2020: It is noticed and pointed out (by whom?) that the proof of Turing-completeness distributed with Burro 2.0 is incorrect — it only holds for very small Turing machines. In response to this, a new extensible conditional idiom is developed for Burro code, with the aim of supporting a correct proof of its Turing-completeness.
- 2025: A minor variant of Burro called Kondey — basically a syntactic sugar for the extensible conditional idiom — is designed, again to support the construction of a new Turing-completeness proof.
Commit History
@rel_2_0_2025_0120
git clone https://git.catseye.tc/Burro/
- Update the nicely formatted Markdown link paragraph again. Chris Pressey a month ago
- Update README and add closing note on TM-to-Kondey translation. Chris Pressey a month ago
- Add history to README and move explication to separate document. Chris Pressey a month ago
- Update copyright dates. Chris Pressey a month ago
- Explain how we know how to write the new state: ensure cell is 0. Chris Pressey a month ago
- Update instructions for translating Turing Machines to Kondey. Chris Pressey a month ago
- Write out the TM simulation plan. Chris Pressey a month ago
- Convenience commands to run and debug after compiling from Kondey. Chris Pressey a month ago
- Fix bug in parseCond. Add test case for nested conditionals. Chris Pressey a month ago
- Upgrade Kondey parser. I'm not proud, and I have a subscription. Chris Pressey a month ago