Chili is a general-purpose, compiled programming language, focused on productivity, expressiveness and joy of programming™.
At this stage, Chili brings the syntax and fun of a modern, high-level programming language, a robust type system and the performance characteristics of a low-level language.
fn main() = println("Hello, World!")
For more information about up-to-date syntax and language features, check out the demo file.
There are a couple of prerequisites here. First, make sure you have Rust's toolchain installed. Second, make sure you have Visual Studio Build Tools installed.
You can also initialize Visual Studio's environment by running vcvarsall.bat x64
, which should be under ...\VC\Auxiliary\Build
.
You have to compile Chili from source and set up a working directory, to do that, navigate to Chili's directory and run:
./build.bat release
This will create a directory called dist/release
under Chili's directory. To build Chili for debug, run ./build.bat debug
.
First, make sure you have Rust's toolchain installed.
For Linux, make sure you have llvm-12
and clang
installed through your package manager.
MacOS is currently not supported, but will be in the future.
Navigate to Chili's directory and run:
sh build.sh release
This will create a directory called dist/release
under Chili's directory. To build Chili for debug, run sh build.sh
.
For ease of use, I recommend adding
dist/release
to yourPATH
environment variable.
In your terminal, run chili .\examples\playground\build.chl
chili examples/playground/build.chl
You should see "Hello, World!" in printed to your terminal.
To run a compile and run a file directly, without using Chili's build API, use the --run
flag.
Test this out by running the hello world example:
chili examples/hello_world.chl --run
For some examples of what you can do with Chili, check out the examples folder.
- VSCode plugin is available here (currently includes syntax highlighting)
- Functions
- Variables
- Static Typing
- Global type inference
- Scalar types
- Pointers & Arrays & Slices
- Structs & Tuples
- Modules & Imports
- Binding patterns: Struct/Module unpack, Tuple unpack and Glob unpack
- Compile time execution with FFI support
- FFI support
- Build configuration based on compile-time execution
- Dynamically sized types
- Static variables
- Attributes
- Default function arguments
- Panic function
- Varargs
- Printing
- Memory management model (The design is still in progress)
- Ownership (Move & Copy semantics)
- Safe references ("Borrowing")
- Regions
- Parametric polymorphism - supporting both types and constant values
- Associated functions / Methods
- Enums & Pattern matching
- Option & Result types
- Try operator:
?
- Traits / Typeclasses
-
format
function - Closures
- Built-in code testing
- OS Abstractions for Windows
- Filesystem API
- Networking and HTTP
- Date/Time
- OS Abstractions for Linux
- Filesystem API
- Networking and HTTP
- Date/Time
- OS Abstractions for MacOS
- Filesystem API
- Networking and HTTP
- Date/Time
- Formatting/Printing
- Basic data structures
- Box
- List/Vec/Seq (Haven't settled on a name yet)
- String
- HashMap
- HashSet
As the language is in its very early stages, every contribution will help in shaping Chili into what it will become. The best way to contribute right now, is opening issues/bugs and suggesting features/changes. This project is open source, and always will be.