Getting Started • Usage • Contributing • Planned Features • Versioning • License
This is my implementation of the Monkey interpreter in Go, based on Thorsten Ball's Writing an Interpreter in Go with my own changes, extensions and improvements. There are a lot of big changes planned, so this will probably divert a lot from the original project.
These instructions will get you a copy of the project up and running on your local machine for development, as well as normal use of the Hussar tools.
To install Hussar for development, you need Go on your local machine. For instructions on how to install Go for your OS, follow the guide on their website.
For normal usage, you can install Hussar using Homebrew like this:
$ brew install hussar-lang/tap/hussar
Alternatively, you can download a copy from the releases.
The simplest method to download this project for development is with go get
. Simply run go get github.com/hussar-lang/hussar
in your terminal of choice, and the project will be downloaded to your Go path.
An alternative method is to clone the project from this repository directly. You can do this by running git clone [email protected]:hussar-lang/hussar
. For the Go imports to work correctly without change, you will need to place the downloaded project in $GOPATH/src/github.com/hussar-lang/hussar
. Once you're inside the project directory, you may have to run go get ./...
to fetch any dependencies.
You can run scripts with the run subcommand, while passing in the script in question.
$ hussar run file.hss
Another option is to simply call the Hussar command without any subcommands, which will start the interactive mode (or REPL) like so:
$ hussar
Once in the interactive mode, you can run code and get the result returned. You can exit this mode by calling exit(0)
or by pressing control-c in your terminal.
For more information about the tooling and which commands are available to you, you can run the env
subcommand:
$ hussar env
arch: amd64
os: darwin
bin: hussar
gc: go1.12
vers: 0.4.0
Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for details on how to contribute to this project and our code of conduct.
- Add basic recursion.
- Write documentation.
- Refactor existing code for better organisation.
- Increase code coverage in critical areas.
- (LLVM) compilation.
- More types.
- Built in libraries e.g. string handling, filesystem I/O, networking.
- Ability to import user defined libraries.
- More robust interpreter/compiler/etc -> build system.
- Automatic updating of tooling.
We are now tagging all stable releases on the master branch. These releases follow SemVer 2.0. Development is taking place on the develop branch.
For the versions available, see the releases in this repository.
This project is licensed under the MIT license - see the LICENSE file for the details.