Awesome
Overview
Welcome to VVhitespace!
If you are impatient to get started, simply execute make
in the top-level
directory to build the compiler and interpreter, then move to one of the
example directories like examples/hunt-the-wumpus
and execute make run
.
VVhitespace is descended from Whitespace, making a number of small changes with the intention of taming the language, providing the tools necessary to write non-trivial, whitespace-only applications. As a proof of concept, I have implemented Hunt the Wumpus in VVhitespace.
This repository includes several distinct parts:
-
A compiler,
vvc
, accepts human-readable VVhitespace source code and translates it to true VVhitespace code. -
An interpreter,
vvi
, accepts true VVhitespace files as generated byvvc
and executes them according to the rules inreference.md
. -
A library of useful functions including enhanced stack operations, printf, math operations including random number generation, heap operations, string manipulations and user interactions, and bitwise logic functions. See the
stdlib/README.md
for more details. -
Hunt the Wumpus, a text game in which you explore a randomly connected set of caverns, avoiding deep pits and giant cave bats, all while shooting arrows at a Wumpus that wants to eat a tasty, meaty human like yourself! The cave entrance is rumored to be near
examples/hunt-the-wumpus/README.md
. -
Examples including code commentary that demonstrate VVhitespace and the stdlib. See individual subdirectories under
examples/
for details. -
Tests for both the VVhitespace language and the stdlib. Intended to increase confidence for users that want to tinker with the internals, both test suites come with a README explaining how to run the tests and extend them as necessary. To execute all tests, simply run
make test
in the top level directory.
From this point forward, READMEs will assume you have a basic knowledge of
VVhitespace (or at least Whitespace). The file reference.md
provides a short
but comprehensive language reference copied largely from the original
Whitespace language tutorial.
Status
Complete. Tested on FreeBSD and Debian Linux (w/'build-essential' package).
Instructions
To build the VVhitespace software, simply run make
in the top level directory.
This will produce two binaries, vvc
for compiling human-readable
pseudo-VVhitespace into true VVhitespace, and vvi
for interpreting/executing
VVhitespace programs.
Use these two programs to build and run your VVS programs:
vvc -i your_code.pvvs -o output_file.vvs
vvi -i output_file.vvs
By convention, the extension .pvvs
is used for pseudo-VVhitespace code and
.vvs
is used for true VVhitespace code.
The stdlib uses the C preprocessor to #include
library files. Projects like
examples/hello-world
demonstrate combining the stdlib and the C preprocessor
in the Makefile
. The invocation will take this general form:
cpp -I/path/to/stdlib/files -I. -o temp.pvvs your_code.pvvs
vvc -i temp.pvvs -o output_file.vvs
vvi -i output_file.vvs
Alternatively, you may simply hijack one of the example projects. All are
pre-configured to compile with the standard library using make run
and only
require the user to #include
the appropriate stdlib files for the functions
called. For example, if the printf
function was used, the bottom of the file
should include this line:
#include <stdio.pvvs>
Before running the VVhitespace or stdlib tests, read README.md
in their
respective directories. It details the steps required to configure the tests.
Every test is also a minimal example for a single VVhitespace feature or stdlib
function, with documented input and expected output.
Helpful Hints
Syntax highlighting greatly eases both reading and writing VVhitespace code.
Examples for vim
(and any other editor with regex based syntax highlighting)
can be found in syntax_highlighting/README.md
.
In addition to Hunt the Wumpus, the examples/
directory provides several
other smaller examples. All have comprehensible Makefile
and code that is
easily modified to use as the start of your own project.
Backward Compatibility
Since the [VTab]
character is considered a comment character in Whitespace,
most VVhitespace code should also be valid Whitespace code, and usually with
similar results. All other changes to the language attempt to restrict
implementation impediments without violating the original definition.
Tests are included for both the core VVhitespace language and the stdlib. After
compiling with cpp
and vvc
, the resulting tests may be executed with any
Whitespace compiler to identify any specific incompatibilities. Everything has
been kept simple in the hope it will be easy to modify.