Red is a new programming language strongly inspired by Rebol, but with a broader field of usage thanks to its native-code compiler, from system programming to high-level scripting, while providing modern support for concurrency and multi-core CPUs.
Red has its own complete cross-platform toolchain, featuring two compilers, an interpreter and a linker, not depending on any third-party library, except for a Rebol2 interpreter, required during the bootstrap phase. Once complete, Red will be self-hosted.
The Red software stack also contains another language, Red/System, which is a low-level dialect of Red. It is a limited C-level language with a Red look'n feel, required to build Red's runtime library and be the target language of Red's compiler. More information at red-lang.org.
The Red toolchain comes as a single half-megabyte executable file that you can download from here for the big-3 platforms.
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Put the downloaded red binary in a folder that's in the PATH, or just in the working folder.
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In a code or text editor, write the following Hello World program:
Red [ Title: "Simple hello world script" ] print "Hello World!"
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Save it under the name: hello.red
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From a shell (works from DOS too), run it with:
red hello.red
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You should see the Hello World! output.
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Want to generate a compiled executable from that program?
red -c hello.red ./hello
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Want to cross-compile to another supported platform?
red -t Windows hello.red red -t Darwin hello.red red -t Linux-ARM hello.red
The command-line options are:
red [options] [file]
[file]
Any Red or Red/System source file. If no file and no option is provided, the REPL will be launched. If a file with no option is provided, the file will be simply run by the interpreter (it is expected to be a Red script with no Red/System code).
[options]
-c, --compile : Forces generation of an executable in
the working folder.
-d, --debug, --debug-stabs : Compile source file in debug mode. STABS
is supported for Linux targets.
-dlib, --dynamic-lib : Generate a shared library from the source
file.
-h, --help : Output this help text.
-o <file>, --output <file> : Specify a non-default [path/][name] for
the generated binary file.
-r, --no-runtime : Do not include runtime during Red/System
source compilation.
-t <ID>, --target <ID> : Cross-compile to a different platform
target than the current one (see targets
table below).
-v <level>, --verbose <level> : Set compilation verbosity level, 1-3 for
Red, 4-11 for Red/System.
-V, --version : Output binary version string.
--red-only : Stop just after Red-level compilation.
Use higher verbose level to see compiler
output. (internal debugging purpose)
Cross-compilation targets:
MSDOS : Windows, x86, console (+ GUI) applications
Windows : Windows, x86, GUI applications
Linux : GNU/Linux, x86
Linux-ARM : GNU/Linux, ARMv5
Darwin : MacOSX Intel, console-only applications
Syllable : Syllable OS, x86
Android : Android, ARMv5
Android-x86 : Android, x86
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Just run the
red
binary with no option to access the REPL.-=== Red Console alpha version ===- (only ASCII input supported) red>>
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You can use it to test rapidly some Red code:
red>> 1 + 2 == 3 red>> inc: func [n][n + 1] == func [n][n + 1] red>> inc 123 == 124
The compiler and linker are currently written in Rebol. Please follow the instructions for installing the compiler toolchain in order to run it from sources:
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Clone this git repository or download an archive (
ZIP
button above or from tagged packages). -
Download a Rebol interpreter suitable for your OS: Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Solaris
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Extract the
rebol
binary, put it in root folder, that's all! -
Let's test it: run
./rebol
, you'll see a>>
prompt appear. Windows users need to double-click on therebol.exe
file to run it. -
From the REBOL console type:
>> do/args %red.r "%red/tests/hello.red"
The compilation process should finish with a ...output file size
message. The resulting binary is in the working folder. Windows users need to open a DOS console and run hello.exe
from there.
To see the intermediary Red/System code generated by the compiler, use:
>> do/args %red.r "-v 2 %red/tests/hello.red"
Some anti-virus programs are a bit too sensitive and can wrongly report an alert on some binaries generated by Red, if that happens to you, please fill a ticket here, so we can report the false positive.
Both Red and Red/System are published under BSD license, runtime is under BSL license. BSL is a bit more permissive license than BSD, more suitable for the runtime parts.