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Orchid language Build Status

Orchid is a programming language not intended to be used be anyone. It's named Orchid because I can.

Features

  • standard types: int64 (signed 64-bit integer) and bool
  • pointer types
  • statically typed global and local mutable variables
  • arithmetical and boolean expressions (e. g. +, %, **, or, not, >=, etc.)
  • if statement
  • while statement
  • pass statement
  • functions
  • comments
  • simple IO with basic error handling
  • user-defined classes
    • public/private
    • inheritance
    • virtual methods
  • dynamic memory (new/delete)

Syntax

Orchid's syntax is similar to the one used in Python programming language. However, it's extremely simplified and there are some changes because Orchid is statically typed and is not interpreted but compiled. Full grammar specification may be found in grammar.txt. Below is a less formal description of syntax.

Overall structure

Input is a sequence of statements. Statement may be either simple or compound. Simple statement takes one line, while compound statement takes more than one line. Simple statements may consist of multiple substatements delimited by ;. Comments start with # and last until the end of line. Comments and empty lines are completely ignored. Only function and global variable definitions are allowed as top-level statements (it may be changed in future versions).

Indentation

Compound statements use indentation to group sequence of statements into blocks. It is implemented just like in Python, i. e. by introducing two special tokens: INDENT and DEDENT. Full rules may be found on Python website. There are a difference though: only spaces are valid in Orchid, input MUST NOT contain tab characters.

Function definition

Function definition starts with def keyword followed by function name, argument list, optional return type and : symbol. The next lines contain indented block with function's body. Argument list is enclosed in parenthesis and contains (possible empty) list of typed arguments delimited by comma. Trailing comma is permitted. Typed argument has a form name : type. Type of argument is an identifier optionally followed by * (to denote pointer type). Return type is separated by (U+2192) character and represented as identifier. Function body is a sequence of statements. Nested function definitions are accepted by parser, but are prohibited in this version (the error is raised in such cases). Function names starting with __ are reserved for internal usage by standard library.

Example:

def f(a : int64, b: int64) → int64:
    return a + b

def q(a : A *) → int64:
    (*a).z()
    return 0

Variable definition

Variable definition may occur as a top-level statement (in this case it's global variable) or inside function body (local variable). It has a form type name = value.

Example:

int64 a = 42

Class definition

Class definition starts with class keyword followed by class name, optional parent class in parenthesis and : symbol. The next lines contain indented block with class's body containing sequence of class statements.

Class statement is either a function (method) definition or variable (member) definition. Each class statement starts with access modifier (either public or private). Function definition inside class body is the same as for top-level function, except that it may be prefixed with virtual keyword to denote virtual function. Variable definition inside class body has exactly the same syntax as outside class body. Initializer is used when object of the class is constructed.

Example:

class A:
    private int64 x = 0
    public f() → bool:
        return True

    virtual public g() → int64:
        return x

class B(A):
    virtual public g() → int64:
        return 8

pass

There is a special keyword pass which doesn't do anything and may be used anywhere (even as top-level statement).

Example:

while True:  # hang
    pass

Control flow statements

This version has only one control flow statement: return. It's represented using keyword return with optional expression after it.

Example:

def f() → bool:
  return True

Assignment

Assingment is represented using = operator: var = expr.

Example:

a = 1

Expressions

The most simple expressions are constants and variables itself. Integer constants are represented as usual, boolean constants are True and False. More complex expressions are function calls and operator applications. Function call has a form function(arg1, arg2). Operators may be unary (not, +, -, *, &) and binary (or, and, <, >, ==, <=, >=, !=, +, -, *, /, %, **). Unary * dereferences pointer, & takes pointer, ** is power, the rest are intuitive enough. Expressions may be enclosed in parenthesis to influence priority in a standard way.

Examples:

True, 1 < 2, False or True, f(1), not (f(5 + 1) % g()), &a.

while

While statement starts with a keyword while, followed by condition expression, : character and indented block with body.

Example:

while a < b:
  a = a + 1

if

If statement start with a keyword if, followed by condition expression, : character and indent block with body. It may optionally contain else: statement on a separate line with the same indentation as if keyword.

Example:

if a < 0:
  return -a
else:
  return a

new

Operator new allocated memory in heap for the value of given type and stores pointer under given name. Syntax is new TYPE NAME. Value is not initialized.

Example:

new Point p

delete

Operator delete frees memory allocated by new. It takes variable name which must store pointer returned by new. Syntax is delete NAME.

Example:

delete p

Semantics

TODO Most of semantics is absolutely intuitive, but still has to be described here.

Standard library

All functions in standard library start with std prefix. Standard library contains the following functions:

  • stdExit(int64)

    This function aborts execution of the program with given exit code and prints a message to stdout.

  • stdReadInt() → int64

    This function reads 64-bit integer from stdin and expects \n in the end. It aborts execution with exit code 1 in case of any error.

  • stdReadBool() → bool

    This function reads boolean value from stdin. It behaves just like stdReadInt and interprets 0 as False and all other numbers as True.

  • stdWriteInt(int64)

    This function prints 64-bit integer followed by \n to stdout. It aborts execution with exit code 2 in case of any error.

  • stdWriteBool(bool)

    This function prints boolean value followed by \n to stdout. It behaves just like stdWriteInt and prints True as 1 and False as 0.

  • stdPower(int64, int64)

    stdPower(a, b) is the same as a ** b. It uses exponentation by squaring algorithm. It aborts execution with exit code 3 if both arguments are 0.

Examples

Examples may be found in examples directory.

Orchid compiler

Orchid compiler (named orchid) is implemented in Haskell programming language. Target platform is LLVM.

Build dependencies

The only officially supported way to build this compiler is to use stack. Full list of dependencies is the following:

  • LLVM 3.5
  • stack
  • llvm-as and lli are needed to run tests

Mac OS

There is a known problem with build on Mac OS. It is described in this issue. One possible solution is to set correct value for DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH environmental variable and workaround another bug.

Usage

Run stack setup and then stack build to build the compiler. Run stack exec orchid -- <ARGUMENTS> to run the compiler. Run stack exec orchid -- --help to get a full list of options.

If you want to run tests use stack test Orchid command.

Also there is a simple benchmark which compares execution time of multiple factorial executions compiled with optimizations and without. You can run it using stack bench Orchid.

Optimizations

By default compiler performs tail recursion elimination with acuumulator extraction. It can be disabled by passing --not-optimize flag.

Known bugs

  • return is required even if function returns void

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Documentation and compiler for Orchid programming language.

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