This extension embeds Perl Interpreter into PHP.
It allows execute Perl files, evaluate Perl code,
access Perl variables and instantiate Perl objects.
execline is a very light non-interactive scripting language,
which is similar to /bin/sh. Simple shell scripts can be
easily rewritten in the execline language, improving performance
and memory usage. execline was designed for use
in embedded systems, but works on most Unix flavors.
execline features conditional loops, getopt-style option handling,
filename globbing, and more. Meanwhile, its syntax
is far more logical and predictable than the shell's syntax,
and has no security issues.
This package contains the Mesa "Clover" libOpenCL implementation. This
implementation is build onto GALLIUM and as such can only be used on Radeon
cards.
The Gambit programming system is a full implementation of the Scheme
language which conforms to the R4RS and IEEE Scheme standards. It
consists of two main programs: gsi-gambit, the Gambit Scheme
interpreter, and gsc-gambit, the Gambit Scheme compiler.
Gambit-C is a version of the Gambit programming system in which the
compiler generates portable C code, making the whole Gambit-C system
and the programs compiled with it easily portable to many computer
architectures for which a C compiler is available. With appropriate
declarations in the source code the executable programs generated by
the compiler run roughly as fast as equivalent C programs.
PicoC is a very small C interpreter for scripting. It was originally written for
scripting a UAV's on-board flight system and it's also very suitable for other
robotic, embedded and non-embedded applications too.
The GCL system contains C and Lisp source files to build a Common
Lisp sytem. The original KCL system was written by Taiichi Yuasa
and Masami Hagiya in 1984. The AKCL system work was begun in 1987
by William Schelter and continued through 1994. In 1994 AKCL was
released as GCL (GNU Common Lisp) under the GNU public library
license.
NOTE: GCL supports Tk bindings with Tcl 8 and Tk 8.
Ruby is the interpreted scripting language for quick and
easy object-oriented programming. It has many features to
process text files and to do system management tasks (as in
Perl). It is simple, straight-forward, and extensible.
Features of Ruby are shown below.
+ Simple Syntax
+ *Normal* Object-Oriented features(ex. class, method calls)
+ *Advanced* Object-Oriented features(ex. Mix-in, Singleton-method)
+ Operator Overloading
+ Exception Handling
+ Iterators and Closures
+ Garbage Collection
+ Dynamic Loading of Object files(on some architecture)
+ Highly Portable(works on many UNIX machines, and on DOS,
Windows, Mac, BeOS etc.)
This is an interpreter of the brainf*ck language, written in the pure,
lazy, functional language Haskell.
Ruby is the interpreted scripting language for quick and
easy object-oriented programming. It has many features to
process text files and to do system management tasks (as in
Perl). It is simple, straight-forward, and extensible.
Features of Ruby are shown below.
+ Simple Syntax
+ *Normal* Object-Oriented features(ex. class, method calls)
+ *Advanced* Object-Oriented features(ex. Mix-in, Singleton-method)
+ Operator Overloading
+ Exception Handling
+ Iterators and Closures
+ Garbage Collection
+ Dynamic Loading of Object files(on some architecture)
+ Highly Portable(works on many UNIX machines, and on DOS,
Windows, Mac, BeOS etc.)
This is an interpreter of the Unlambda language, written in the pure,
lazy, functional language Haskell.