These are the manuals for the TCL and TK commands and the TCL and
TK library. They're installed in PREFIX/share/doc/tcl83/contents.htm,
PREFIX/share/doc/tcl84/contents.htm and
PREFIX/share/doc/tcl85/contents.htm.
This is Tcl8.4, an embeddable tool command language.
The best way to get started with Tcl is to read ``Tcl and the Tk
Toolkit'' by John K. Ousterhout, Addison-Wesley, ISBN 0-201-63337-X.
A full set of manual pages is also provided with this package.
This is Tcl version 8.5, an embeddable tool command language.
Tcl (Tool Command Language) is a very powerful but easy to learn dynamic
programming language, suitable for a very wide range of uses, including web
and desktop applications, networking, administration, testing and many more.
Open source and business-friendly, Tcl is a mature yet evolving language that
is truly cross platform, easily deployed and highly extensible.
A full set of manual pages is also provided with this port.
Extended Tcl (TclX), is a set of extensions to Tcl, the Tool
Command Language invented by Dr. John Ousterhout of the University
of California at Berkeley. Tcl is a powerful, yet simple embeddable
programming language. Extended Tcl is oriented towards Unix system
programming tasks, with many additional interfaces to the Unix
operating system, It is upwardly compatible with Tcl. You take
the Extended Tcl package, add it to Tcl, and from that you get
Extended Tcl.
This is Tcl version 8.6, an embeddable tool command language.
Tcl (Tool Command Language) is a very powerful but easy to learn dynamic
programming language, suitable for a very wide range of uses, including web
and desktop applications, networking, administration, testing and many more.
Open source and business-friendly, Tcl is a mature yet evolving language that
is truly cross platform, easily deployed and highly extensible.
A full set of manual pages is also provided with this port.
This is Tcl version 8.7, an embeddable tool command language.
Tcl (Tool Command Language) is a very powerful but easy to learn dynamic
programming language, suitable for a very wide range of uses, including web
and desktop applications, networking, administration, testing and many more.
Open source and business-friendly, Tcl is a mature yet evolving language that
is truly cross platform, easily deployed and highly extensible.
A full set of manual pages is also provided with this port.
IBM Research is developing the open-source X10 programming language to
provide a programming model that can address the architectural challenge
of multiples cores, hardware accelerators, clusters, and supercomputers
in a manner that provides scalable performance in a productive manner.
Yabasic implements the most common and simple elements of the basic language;
It comes with goto/gosub, with various loops, with user defined subroutines
and Libraries. Yabasic does monochrome line graphics and printing.
Yabasic runs under Unix and Windows; it is small (around 200KB) and free.
Yorick is an interpreted programming language for:
* Scientific simulations or calculations
* Postprocessing or steering large simulation codes
* Interactive scientific graphics
* Reading, writing, and translating large files of numbers
The language features a compact syntax for many common array operations,
so it processes large arrays of numbers very quickly and efficiently.
Superficially, yorick code resembles C code, but yorick variables are
never explicitly declared and have a dynamic scoping similar to many Lisp
dialects. The yorick language is designed to be typed interactively at a
keyboard, as well as stored in files for later use.
This package includes an emacs-based development environment, which one
can launch by typing M-x yorick in emacs, if installed `yorick.el' have
been loaded into one's ~/.emacs file.
tinypy is a minimalist implementation of python in 64k of code
it includes a whole heap of features:
* parser and bytecode compiler written in tinypy
* fully bootstrapped
* luaesque virtual machine with garbage collection written in C
it's "stackless" sans any "stackless" features
* cross-platform :) it runs under Windows / Linux / OS X
* a fairly decent subset of python
o classes and single inheritance
o functions with variable or keyword arguments
o strings, lists, dicts, numbers
o modules, list comprehensions
o exceptions with full traceback
o some builtins
* batteries not included -- yet