Tree @ad8e064 (Download .tar.gz)
SixtyPical
SixtyPical is a very low-level programming language, similar to 6502 assembly, with static analysis through abstract interpretation.
In practice, this means it catches things like
- you forgot to clear carry before adding something to the accumulator
- a subroutine that you call trashes a register you thought was preserved
- you tried to write the address of something that was not a routine, to a jump vector
and suchlike. It also provides some convenient operations and abstractions based on common machine-language programming idioms, such as
- copying values from one register to another (via a third register when there are no underlying instructions that directly support it)
- explicit tail calls
- indirect subroutine calls
The reference implementation can execute, analyze, and compile SixtyPical programs to 6502 machine code.
SixtyPical is a work in progress. The current released version of SixtyPical is 0.9-PRE (not released yet.)
Documentation
- Design Goals
- SixtyPical specification
- SixtyPical revision history
- Literate test suite for SixtyPical syntax
- Literate test suite for SixtyPical execution
- Literate test suite for SixtyPical analysis
- Literate test suite for SixtyPical compilation
- 6502 Opcodes used/not used in SixtyPical
TODO
Operations on 16 bit values
Compare word (constant or memory location) with memory location or pointer. (Maybe?)
And then write a little demo "game" where you can move a block around the screen with the joystick.
word table and vector table types
low and high address operators
To turn word type into byte.
save registers on stack
This preserves them, so semantically, they can be used even though they are trashed inside the block.
And at some point...
copy x, [ptr] + y- Maybe even
copy [ptra] + y, [ptrb] + y, which can be compiled to indirect LDA then indirect STA! - Check that the buffer being read or written to through pointer, appears in approporiate inputs or outputs set.
- initialized
byte tablememory locations - always analyze before executing or compiling, unless told not to
trashinstruction.interruptroutines.- 6502-mnemonic aliases (
sec,clc) - other handy aliases (
eqforz, etc.) - have
copyinstruction able to copy a constant to a user-def mem loc, etc. - add absolute addressing in shl/shr, absolute-indexed for add, sub, etc.
- check and disallow recursion.
- automatic tail-call optimization (could be tricky, w/constraints?)
- re-order routines and optimize tail-calls to fallthroughs
Commit History
@ad8e0647a43ba5310237015b0d56db184f0eb545
git clone https://git.catseye.tc/SixtyPical/
- Use right endianness when `copy`ing literal word into storage. Chris Pressey 8 years ago
- Add beginnings of thing which may one day become a game. Untested. Chris Pressey 8 years ago
- Amend spec with brief description of new behaviour of `add`. Chris Pressey 8 years ago
- Add word (constant or memory loc) to pointer (unchecked for now). Chris Pressey 8 years ago
- Adding a word memory location to another word memory location. Chris Pressey 8 years ago
- Adding a constant word to a memory location. Chris Pressey 8 years ago
- Ability to --debug analysis. Make 16-bit addition test pass. Chris Pressey 8 years ago
- Initial work on adding 16-bit constants to a 16-bit location. Chris Pressey 8 years ago
- Create branch for developing version 0.9. Chris Pressey 8 years ago
- Merge pull request #2 from catseye/develop-0.8 Chris Pressey (commit: GitHub) 8 years ago