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Robin
Version 0.8 | Try it online @ catseye.tc | See also: Pixley
Overview
Robin is an excessively principled and thoroughly specified functional programming language with eager evaluation, latent typing, and a homoiconic syntax, based on a radically simple core semantics in which the so-called "fexpr" is the fundamental abstraction and both functions and macros are defined in terms of it.
Expressions in Robin are referentially transparent; programs interact with the outside world through an event-driven framework.
For more information, see the extended description below.
Quick Start
The Robin reference interpreter is written in about 1300 lines of Haskell.
To use it, you'll need an implementation of Haskell installed (typically either
ghc
or Hugs).
First, clone this repository and cd
into the repo directory. Then run
./build.sh
If you have cabal
installed, build.sh
will use it to build the robin
executable, and this will take care of obtaining and building the dependencies.
If you do not have cabal
, the script will use ghc
directly to build the
executable, but in this case, you will need to ensure you have dependencies
like parsec
and random
installed, yourself.
(If you don't have ghc
at all, no executable will be built; but that's OK,
because in this case the bin/robin
driver script will fall back to using
runhaskell
or runhugs
instead.)
In any case, the build.sh
script will also build build the standard library
(pkg/stdlib.robin
). And this same build script can be used to build the
JavaScript version of the interpreter, with build.sh web
.
After running build.sh
, you can run the Robin interpreter using the
driver script in bin
, on one of the example Robin sources in eg
like so:
./bin/robin pkg/stdlib.robin eg/hello-world.robin
You should see
Hello, world!
To continue learning to program in Robin you can follow The Robin Tutorial.
Testing
If you have a few minutes to spare, and you have Falderal installed, you can run the test suite (consisting of more than 600 unit tests) by running
./test.sh
The tests that use only Robin's core semantics (with no help from implementation "builtins") are quite slow, so you may want to skip them, by running
APPLIANCES="appliances/robin.md" ./test.sh
The test suite will also run some property tests (using QuickCheck). Notably, for every operator that is defined multiple times (which includes much of stdlib, where the core definitions are written in Robin but also implemented in Haskell as "builtins" in the reference interpreter), QuickCheck will attempt to falsify the assertion that the definitions define the same operator. These attempts are currently rather crude; there is lots of room for improvement for them in some future release.
Extended Description
For experienced programmers, Robin might be best described by listing the languages that have had the strongest influences on it:
Scheme
Like Scheme, Robin is eagerly evaluated, latently typed, and homoiconic, as well as properly tail-recursive and lexically scoped (at least by default), and tries hard to be well-defined and system-agnostic, but (as you can read below) diverges significantly from Scheme in other ways.
Forth
Like Forth, Robin has a radically simple core semantics. There are 15 intrinsic operations; every symbol in the standard library is defined in terms of these intrinsics, while an implementation is free to provide its own (perhaps more efficient) implementation of any such symbol. (See also Pixley).
PicoLisp
In most languages, the arguments to a function are evaluated before the function is applied, but PicoLisp allows defining functions with unevaluated arguments. In historical Lisp, such operators were called fexprs. Robin adopts fexprs as the fundamental abstraction — both functions and macros are defined in terms of fexprs.
The Kernel programming language also takes fexprs as its fundamental abstraction; however, Robin was developed oblivious of Kernel — it adapted the idea directly from PicoLisp.
Haskell
Like Haskell, Robin is referentially transparent (often described as "purely functional") — mutation of values is forbidden. (Robin intentionally does not, however, adopt lazy evaluation or a static type system.)
Elm
Interactive programs in Robin are built by composing transducers which are driven by events and produce effects (which are modelled as further events), in a manner very similar to The Elm Architecture.
Bourne shell
Arbitrary text can by embedded in a Robin program using a syntax very much like a "heredoc", except it is an S-expression.
English
Deserves at least a passing mention here, as one thing that Robin
discards from Scheme is its jargony terminology: no cdr
, no cons
,
no lambda
. (A notable exception is fexpr
simply because there is no
satisfying short, non-jargony word that connotes how these operators work.)
For a full description of the Robin language, see the Robin specification document.
Repository Layout
appliances/
— test appliances for the literate test suite.bin/
— driver script, destination for executable when built.demo/
— contains HTML5 document demonstrating build to JS by Haste.doc/
— Tutorial, specification, rationale, etc.eg/
— example programs written in Robinsrc/
— Haskell source for reference interpreter.stdlib/
— normative definitions of standard library symbols.HISTORY.md
— history of this distribution.TODO.md
— plans.
Commit History
@master
git clone https://git.catseye.tc/Robin/
- Arrange licensing info in repo according to REUSE 3.2 convention. Chris Pressey 3 months ago
- Put a date on the revision. Chris Pressey 8 months ago
- Mention two more minor items of history. Chris Pressey 8 months ago
- Update HISTORY file with these recent changes. Chris Pressey 8 months ago
- Cherrypatch some changes from the "develop-0.9" branch. Chris Pressey 8 months ago
- Replace goofy Makefile with `build.sh` and `clean.sh` scripts. Chris Pressey 8 months ago
- Finish fixing up documentation of stdlib by adding headings. Chris Pressey 8 months ago
- Fix `literal` tests to be syntactically non-extraneous. Chris Pressey 8 months ago
- Fix up documentation of stdlib by adding headings (checkpoint). Chris Pressey 8 months ago
- Allow building it with ghc in the modern world (I guess). Chris Pressey 8 months ago