This package is a dependency of lang/gnatdroid-x86. It provides the
cross-tools required to build the GNAT FreeBSD->x86 cross-compiler that
is gnatdroid, as well as any binaries that it produces.
This package is used by lang/gnatdroid to install the system root of
Android 4.4 to 5.0 (API Level 19 to API Level 23) of the x86 architecture.
The x86 cross-tools are built using these files, which in turn is required
for the GNAT FreeBSD->Android(x86) cross-compiler that is gnatdroid.
This package is used by lang/gnatdroid to install the system root of
Android 4.0 to 6.0 (API Level 15 to API Level 23) of the ARM architecture.
The ARM cross-tools are built using these files, which in turn is required
for the GNAT FreeBSD->ARM cross-compiler that is gnatdroid.
The gnatdroid-x86 port builds a C/Ada cross-compiler based on GCC 6
that targets the Android operating system (up to version 6.0, API level
23) running on x86 or x86_64 architecture. This produces binaries that
run natively on x86-based Android devices.
Erlang is a programming language used to build massively scalable soft
real-time systems with requirements on high availability. Some of its
uses are in telecoms, banking, e-commerce, computer telephony and
instant messaging. Erlang's runtime system has built-in support for
concurrency, distribution and fault tolerance.
GNU Prolog is a free Prolog compiler with constraint solving over finite
domains developed by Daniel Diaz.
GNU Prolog accepts Prolog+constraint programs and produces native binaries
(like gcc does from a C source). The obtained executable is then stand-alone.
The size of this executable can be quite small since GNU Prolog can avoid to
link the code of most unused built-in predicates. The performances of GNU
Prolog are very encouraging (comparable to commercial systems).
Beside the native-code compilation, GNU Prolog offers a classical interactive
interpreter (top-level) with a debugger.
The Prolog part conforms to the ISO standard for Prolog with many extensions
very useful in practice (global variables, OS interface, sockets,...).
GNU Prolog also includes an efficient constraint solver over Finite Domains
(FD). This opens contraint logic pogramming to the user combining the power
of constraint programming to the declarativity of logic programming.
This is a "meta-port" to install the units for Free Pascal.
The AUX compiler supports several languages: Ada, C, C++, Fortran and
Objective-C. Since Ada support must be built by an Ada-capable compiler,
only platforms for which a bootstrap compiler is available can build it.
The AUX compiler is based on release versions of the Free Software
Foundation's GNU Compiler Collection. It uses the GCC Runtime Library
Exception, so the resulting binaries have no licensing requirements.
Binaries produced by the AUX compiler should be legally handled the same
as binaries produced by any FSF compiler.
This compiler implements the full Ada-83, Ada-95, Ada-2005 and Ada-2012
standards.
HuC is a PC Engine C compiler. It can create ROMs (hucard) or CD images
and is bundled with an assembler and all kinds of libraries. You can ouput
text, scrolls, make sound, control CD, handle sprites and tiles, and more.
Io is small prototype-based programming language. The ideas in Io
are mostly inspired by Smalltalk (all values are objects), Self
(prototype-based), NewtonScript (differential inheritance), Act1
(actors and futures for concurrency), LISP (code is a runtime
inspectable/modifiable tree) and Lua (small, embeddable).