A pre-built version of the Eclipse Java Compiler (ECJ) used to build
and support the Java frontend of the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC).
Elixir tooling integration into Emacs. Alchemist comes with a bunch
of features:
- Mix integration
- Compile & Execution of Elixir code
- Inline code evaluation
- Documentation lookup
- Definition lookup
- Powerful IEx integration
- Smart code completion
- Elixir project management
- Integration with company-mode
This package contains the Mesa "Clover" libOpenCL implementation. This
implementation is build onto GALLIUM and as such can only be used on Radeon
cards.
Originally named FPK-Pascal, the Free Pascal compiler is a 32 bit and 64 bit
Turbo Pascal compatible Pascal compiler for DOS, Linux, Win32, OS/2,
(based on an older version) the AmigaOS, FreeBSD/ELF, BeOS, Darwin(OSX)
and others.
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.
Perl is a language that combines some of the features of C, sed, awk and
shell. See the manual page for more hype. There are also many books
published by O'Reilly & Assoc. See pod/perlbook.pod for more
information.
PhantomJS is a minimalistic, headless, WebKit-based, JavaScript-driven
tool.
It has native support for different web technologies: DOM handling,
CSS selector, JSON, Canvas, SVG, and of course JavaScript.
GCC, the GNU Compiler Collection, supports a number of languages. This
port installs the C, C++, Fortran and Java front ends as gcc46, g++46,
gfortran46, and gcj46, respectively.
Gerald Pfeifer <gerald@FreeBSD.org>