Category:S-lang
This programming language may be used to instruct a computer to perform a task.
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Type checking: | Dynamic |
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S-Lang is a multi-platform programmer's library designed to allow a developer to create robust multi-platform software. It provides facilities required by interactive applications such as display/screen management, keyboard input, keymaps, and so on. The most exciting feature of the library is the slang interpreter that may be easily embedded into a program to make it extensible. While the emphasis has always been on the embedded nature of the interpreter, it may also be used in a stand-alone fashion through the use of slsh, which is part of the S-Lang distribution.
Unlike many interpreters, the S-Lang interpreter supports all of the native C integer types (signed and unsigned versions of char, short, int, long, and long long), and both single and double precision types, as well as a double precision complex type. Other data types supported by the interpreter include strings, lists, associative arrays (hashes), user-defined structures, and multi-dimensional arrays of any data-type.
The S-Lang interpreter has very strong support for array-based operations making it ideal for numerical applications. (from the official web site])
Task Output Notes:
For simplicity, many of the S-Lang tasks use the print() function. This is not part of S-Lang per se, but is normally included in the S-Lang shell "slsh". If it is missing, or you're using some other S-Lang environment, options include C-like fputs(), sprintf() and printf(). Their format and parameters work about like you'd expect in a C-inspired interpreted language.
sprintf(f, d..)
[f=string format, d..=zero or more data items]
returns a string. printf(f, d..)
prints to "stdout" and returns
the number of items formatted. fputs(s, fp)
prints string s to the
file-pointer fp and returns the string length or -1 on error. Remember S-Lang is a "stack
language", so even if you don't care about the return value, your code
should "eat" it:
() = printf("S-Lang: %d tasks and counting!\n", 23);
() = fputs("the quality of mercy is not strnen\n", stdout);
You can approximate print() with the following; NOTE the capital-S, which implicitly calls the string() function to convert-or-describe non-strings as strings:
define print(foo) { () = printf("%S\n", foo); }
S-Lang is the extension language for the lightweight Emacs-like programmer's editor Jed. There, the output functions include:
insert(s) write string s into current buffer vinsert(f,d..) insert(sprintf(f, d..)) ["variable"] equivalent message(s) write string s into "mini-buffer" vmessage(f,d..) message(sprintf(f, d..)) equivalent error(s) like message(), but in error-color, then cancel cmd verror(f, d..) error(sprintf(f, d..)) equivalent
See Also
Subcategories
This category has the following 3 subcategories, out of 3 total.
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- S-lang examples needing attention (empty)
- S-lang Implementations (empty)
- S-lang User (2 P)
Pages in category "S-lang"
The following 40 pages are in this category, out of 40 total.