Paketname | c-repl |
Beschreibung | read-eval-print loop for C |
Archiv/Repository | Offizielles Debian Archiv squeeze (main) |
Version | 0.0.20071223-1 |
Sektion | interpreters |
Priorität | extra |
Installierte Größe | 72 Byte |
Hängt ab von | libc6 (>= 2.7-1), libreadline-ruby, ruby |
Empfohlene Pakete | |
Paketbetreuer | Robert S. Edmonds |
Quelle | |
Paketgröße | 9548 Byte |
Prüfsumme MD5 | b4619f623df8ac16ea0a9c06281b6d96 |
Prüfsumme SHA1 | 4059f79d46fc3bd540bcacfe1e7e0131612c681c |
Prüfsumme SHA256 | 5ad4b2e6a4fddca5b16dc650df5ea65b4b5455fd336a828f6742b04741a7c608 |
Link zum Herunterladen | c-repl_0.0.20071223-1_i386.deb |
Ausführliche Beschreibung | Many programming languages come with a REPL (read-eval-print loop), which
allows you to type in code line by line and see what it does. This is quite
useful for prototyping, experimentation, and debugging code.
.
Other programming languages, and especially C, use a "compile-run" model,
and don't provide a REPL. Let's fix that.
.
This approach is actually more of a read-eval loop, as c-repl doesn't know
anything about the types and parse trees of the code it's running. But
unlike other approaches to solving the "C interpreter" problem, c-repl
works directly with unmodified libraries and system headers.
.
This means you can experiment with a new library without writing a test
program or any bindings. Or just use it as a simple calculator, content in
knowing it is much faster than your neighbors using irb, like driving a
Ferarri on city streets.
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