Pure is a modern-style functional programming language based on term
rewriting. It offers equational definitions with pattern matching, full
symbolic rewriting capabilities, dynamic typing, eager and lazy evaluation,
lexical closures, built-in list and matrix support and an easy-to-use C
interface. The interpreter uses LLVM as a backend to JIT-compile Pure
programs to fast native code.
The gnatdroid-armv7 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 ARM architecture (version 7). This produces binaries that
run natively on Android devices built with Cortex-A series chips.
Python is an interpreted object-oriented programming language, and is
often compared to Tcl, Perl or Scheme.
This is a meta port to the Python interpreter and provides symbolic links
to bin/python, bin/pydoc, bin/idle and so on to allow compatibility with
version agnostic python scripts.
Python is an interpreted object-oriented programming language, and is
often compared to Tcl, Perl or Scheme.
This package is a dependency of lang/gnatdroid. It provides the cross-tools
required to build the GNAT FreeBSD->ARM cross-compiler that is gnatdroid,
as well as any binaries that it produces.
Python is an interpreted object-oriented programming language, and is
often compared to Tcl, Perl or Scheme.
Python is an interpreted object-oriented programming language, and is
often compared to Tcl, Perl or Scheme.
Python is an interpreted object-oriented programming language, and is
often compared to Tcl, Perl or Scheme.
Duktape is an embeddable Javascript engine, with a focus on portability and
compact footprint.
Duktape is easy to integrate into a C/C++ project: add duktape.c and duktape.h
to your build, and use the Duktape API to call Ecmascript functions from C code
and vice versa.
GCC, the GNU Compiler Collection, supports a number of languages. This
port installs the C, C++, Fortran and Java front ends as gcc49, g++49,
gfortran49, and gcj49, respectively.
Gerald Pfeifer <gerald@FreeBSD.org>