Book Image

Build Your Own Programming Language - Second Edition

By : Clinton L. Jeffery
Book Image

Build Your Own Programming Language - Second Edition

By: Clinton L. Jeffery

Overview of this book

There are many reasons to build a programming language: out of necessity, as a learning exercise, or just for fun. Whatever your reasons, this book gives you the tools to succeed. You’ll build the frontend of a compiler for your language and generate a lexical analyzer and parser using Lex and YACC tools. Then you’ll explore a series of syntax tree traversals before looking at code generation for a bytecode virtual machine or native code. In this edition, a new chapter has been added to assist you in comprehending the nuances and distinctions between preprocessors and transpilers. Code examples have been modernized, expanded, and rigorously tested, and all content has undergone thorough refreshing. You’ll learn to implement code generation techniques using practical examples, including the Unicon Preprocessor and transpiling Jzero code to Unicon. You'll move to domain-specific language features and learn to create them as built-in operators and functions. You’ll also cover garbage collection. Dr. Jeffery’s experiences building the Unicon language are used to add context to the concepts, and relevant examples are provided in both Unicon and Java so that you can follow along in your language of choice. By the end of this book, you'll be able to build and deploy your own domain-specific language.
Table of Contents (27 chapters)
1
Section I: Programming Language Frontends
7
Section II: Syntax Tree Traversals
13
Section III: Code Generation and Runtime Systems
22
Section IV: Appendix
23
Answers
24
Other Books You May Enjoy
25
Index

Summary

This chapter presented the essential elements of bytecode interpreters. Knowing how to implement a bytecode interpreter frees you to generate flexible code, without having to worry about hardware instruction sets, registers, or addressing modes.

First, you learned that the definition of an instruction set includes the opcodes and rules for processing any operands in those instructions. You also learned how to implement generic stack machine semantics, as well as bytecode instructions that correspond to domain-specific language features. Then, you learned how to read and execute bytecode files, including interchangeably working with sequences of bytes and words in both Unicon and Java.

Given the existence of a bytecode interpreter, in the next chapter, we will discuss generating bytecode from intermediate code so that we can run programs that are compiled using our compiler!