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The Bosatsu Programming Language

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Bosatsu (菩薩) is the transliteration in Japanese of the sanskrit bodhisattva. A bodhisattva is someone who can reach enlightenment but decides not to, to help others achieve that goal. -- Wikipedia

Bosatsu is a simple, non-turing complete language designed for configuration, queries and scripting. It borrows from Python, Haskell, Dhall and Rust.

Please see the documentation site or try basic expressions using this in-browser Bosatsu compiler.

An example of Bosatsu

Here is a working Bosatsu program to solve the first Project Euler problem:

package Euler/One

# see:
# https://projecteuler.net/problem=1
# Find the sum of all the multiples of 3 or 5 below 1000.

operator == = eq_Int
operator % = mod_Int

def operator ||(x, y):
  True if x else y

def keep(i):
  (i % 3 == 0) || (i % 5 == 0)

def sum(as): as.foldLeft(0, add)

# here is the python version:
# >>> sum(i for i in xrange(1000) if keep_fn(i))
# 233168
#
# bosatsu version here
computed = sum([i for i in range(1000) if keep(i)])

test = Assertion(computed == 233168, "expected 233168")

Contributing

Please feel free to file an issue to discuss making a change to Bosatsu or to ask a question about how Bosatsu might be useful for a use-case that is interesting to you.

Development notes:

Bosatsu is developed in Scala. We use sbt as the build system. To build bosatsu, run sbt cli/assembly and then the script ./bosatsuj should print help (see the documentation link above for more help). sbt test should run all the tests.

How to run the benchmarks

At the sbt prompt:

bench/jmh:run -i 3 -wi 3 -f1 -t1

or for a specific benchmark

bench/jmh:run -i 3 -wi 3 -f1 -t1 .*SomeBench.*