Skip to content

Files

Latest commit

 

History

History
228 lines (182 loc) · 7.34 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

228 lines (182 loc) · 7.34 KB

The Lumpy Programming Language

Lumpy is a small scripting language with value semantics.

Lumpy features strong dynamic typing, structural equality, assignment by copy, pass by (copied) value, explicit references, and lightweight polymorphism via metamaps and operator overloading. Lumpy utilizes a copy-on-write data model that allows for inexpensive copy operations at runtime, yielding a language that reads, writes, and feels like efficient pseudocode.

Hello World in Lumpy:

# examples/hello-world.lumpy

println("Hello, world!");
/path/to/lumpy$ ./lumpy.py examples/hello-world.lumpy
Hello, world!

Lumpy uses value semantics, so assignment operations copy the contents (i.e. the "value") of an object when executed. After an assignment statement such as a = b, the objects a and b will contain separate copies of the same value. Lumpy also performs equality comparisons based on structural equality, so if two object have the same contents, then they are considered to be equal.

# examples/value-semantics-and-structural-equality.lumpy

let x = ["foo", {"bar": 123}, "baz"];
let y = x; # x is assigned to y by copy
println("x is " + repr(x));
println("y is " + repr(y));
# x and y are separate values with structural equality
println("x == y is " + repr(x == y));

print("\n");

# updates to x and y do not affect each other, because they are separate values
x[0] = "abc";
y[1]["bar"] = "xyz";
println("x is " + repr(x));
println("y is " + repr(y));
# x and y are no longer structurally equal as their contents' now differ
println("x == y is " + repr(x == y));

print("\n");

let z = ["foo", {"bar": "xyz"}, "baz"];
println("z is " + repr(z));
# y and z are separate values with structural equality
println("y == z is " + repr(y == z));
/path/to/lumpy$ ./lumpy.py examples/value-semantics-and-structural-equality.lumpy
x is ["foo", {"bar": 123}, "baz"]
y is ["foo", {"bar": 123}, "baz"]
x == y is true

x is ["abc", {"bar": 123}, "baz"]
y is ["foo", {"bar": "xyz"}, "baz"]
x == y is false

z is ["foo", {"bar": "xyz"}, "baz"]
y == z is true

Each object in Lumpy has a metamap that may be used to alter and extend its functionality. In this example, the == and != operators are overloaded in the metamaps of objects a and b. The overloaded operators test for equality between these objects based on the objects' id fields rather than their structural identities.

# examples/operator-overloading.lumpy

let meta = {
    "==": function(lhs, rhs) {
        return lhs.id == rhs.id;
    },
    "!=": function(lhs, rhs) {
        return lhs.id != rhs.id;
    },
};
let a = {"id": "bananna", "expiry date": "2024-08-24"};
let b = {"id": "bananna", "expiry date": "2024-08-31"};
setmeta(a.&, meta);
setmeta(b.&, meta);
println("a is " + repr(a));
println("b is " + repr(b));
# a and b are semantically equal according to the overloaded "==" and "!="
# operators even though they are not structurally equal
println("a == b is " + repr(a == b));
println("a != b is " + repr(a != b));
/path/to/lumpy$ ./lumpy.py examples/operator-overloading.lumpy
a is {"id": "bananna", "expiry date": "2024-08-24"}
b is {"id": "bananna", "expiry date": "2024-08-31"}
a == b is true
a != b is false

Objects are passed by (copied) value to functions, behaving exactly the same as if they were assigned (i.e. copied due to value semantics) to each parameter. References are first-class values in Lumpy, and pass-by-reference is achieved by taking a refrence to a value with the postfix .& operator, and then passing that value to a function. Lumpy has special syntax where value.func(args) implicitly passes a reference to value as the first argument to metafunction func, similar to this within non-static member functions in C++ or self within non-static methods in Python. The special implicit refrence syntax provides a convenient way to support object-oriented patterns in Lumpy.

# examples/pass-by-value-and-pass-by-reference.lumpy

let f = function(person) {
    println("[within function f] person is " + repr(person));
    person["favorite color"] = "purple";
    println("[within function f] person after modification is " + repr(person));
};

let alice = {"name": "alice", "age": 32};
println("alice before calling f is " + repr(alice));
f(alice); # pass a copy of alice
println("alice after calling f is still " + repr(alice));

print("\n");

let birthday = function(person_ref) {
    # dereference `person_ref` and add one to their `"age"` field.
    person_ref.*.age = person_ref.*.age + 1;
};

birthday(alice.&); # pass a refrence to alice
println("alice after calling birthday is " + repr(alice));

print("\n");

let meta = {
    "birthday": function(self) {
        self.*.age = self.*["age"] + 1;
    },
};
setmeta(alice.&, meta);
alice.birthday(); # alice.& is implicitly passed as the first argument
println("alice after calling birthday (again) is " + repr(alice));
/path/to/lumpy$ ./lumpy.py examples/pass-by-value-and-pass-by-reference.lumpy
alice before calling f is {"name": "alice", "age": 32}
[within function f] person is {"name": "alice", "age": 32}
[within function f] person after modification is {"name": "alice", "age": 32, "favorite color": "purple"}
alice after calling f is still {"name": "alice", "age": 32}

alice after calling birthday is {"name": "alice", "age": 33}

alice after calling birthday (again) is {"name": "alice", "age": 34}

A brief language overview with more information can be found in overview.lumpy, the output of which can be viewed by running:

/path/to/lumpy$ ./lumpy.py overview.lumpy

An example game built in Lumpy using Pygame can be found under the examples/minimalist-game-framework directory. Install Pygame by following the steps in the "Development Setup" section below, and then run the example game with:

(.venv-lumpy) /path/to/lumpy$ ./lumpy.py examples/minimalist-game-framework/game.lumpy

Development Setup

/path/to/lumpy$ python3 -m venv .venv-lumpy
/path/to/lumpy$ . .venv-lumpy/bin/activate
(.venv-lumpy) /path/to/lumpy$ python3 -m pip install -r requirements.txt
(.venv-lumpy) /path/to/lumpy$ make check   # run tests
(.venv-lumpy) /path/to/lumpy$ make lint    # lint with mypy
(.venv-lumpy) /path/to/lumpy$ make format  # format using black
(.venv-lumpy) /path/to/lumpy$ make build   # build standalone executable
(.venv-lumpy) /path/to/lumpy$ make install # install standalone tools

Installing

The install target will install standalone Lumpy tooling into the directory specified by LUMPY_HOME (default $HOME/.lumpy). Run make install with LUMPY_HOME specified as the directory of your choice:

$ make install                        # Install to the default $HOME/.lumpy
$ make install LUMPY_HOME=/opt/lumpy  # Install to /opt/lumpy

Then, add the following snippet to your .profile, replacing $HOME/.lumpy with your chosen LUMPY_HOME directory if installing to a non-default LUMPY_HOME location:

export LUMPY_HOME="$HOME/.lumpy"
if [ -e "$LUMPY_HOME/env" ]; then
    . "$LUMPY_HOME/env"
fi

Verify that the standalone Lumpy tooling has been successfully installed by running lumpy -h. You may need to source your .profile in new shells until the start of your next login session.

License

All content in this repository, unless otherwise noted, is licensed under the Zero-Clause BSD license.

See LICENSE for more information.