A basic compiler based off of thejameskyle's super-tiny-compiler

Matt Coles e53e560173 Update README.md 9 lat temu
.gitignore a1ab34b0e4 Add some example code 9 lat temu
README.md e53e560173 Update README.md 9 lat temu
compiler.js b1a75b62e7 Add function definitions and more example code to showcase this 9 lat temu
example.mc b1a75b62e7 Add function definitions and more example code to showcase this 9 lat temu
stdlib.js b1a75b62e7 Add function definitions and more example code to showcase this 9 lat temu

README.md

babys-first-compiler

A basic compiler based off of @thejameskyle's super-tiny-compiler, compiles a simple LISP-esque syntax into runnable JS.

Currently supports a few built-ins, add, subtract, assign, def and log. Hopefully these are self-explanatory, or at least they should be from example.mc. A # denotes that the rest of the line (until the compiler sees \n) as a comment and means that it will not be compiled, these may not be used within brackets (eg a function definition).

The compiler runs like node compiler.js file.mc where file.mc is the file you wish to compile, and this will produce an output.js which requires stdlib.js to be in the same directory when running for now at least.

Functions and variables are in different scopes, so variables can have the same names as functions - even builtins, thus making (assign assign 5) a totally okay thing to do.

Note that this compiler is not only totally useless, but also horrendously inefficient. Either way it's a fun exercise :)