Skip to content

calroc/joypy

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

   ____  ____     _    _____ _____
  |  _ \|  _ \   / \  |  ___|_   _|
  | | | | |_) | / A \ | |_    | |
  | |_| |  _ < / ___ \|  _|   | |
  |____/|_| \_\_/   \_\_|     |_|

--------------------------------------------------


            Joypy

  A dialect of Joy in Python.


--------------------------------------------------


Copyright © 2014, 2015, 2017 Simon Forman

This file is part of Joypy

Joypy is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software
Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later
version.

Joypy is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY
WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public License for more details.

You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with
Joypy.  If not see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.


--------------------------------------------------


§ Introduction

Joy is a programming language created by Manfred von Thun that is easy to
use and understand and has many other nice properties.  This Python
package implements an interpreter for a dialect of Joy that attempts to
stay very close to the spirit of Joy but does not precisely match the
behaviour of the original version(s) written in C.

The main difference between Joypy and the originals, other than being
written in Python, is that it works by the "Continuation-Passing Style".
In Joy, control-flow is done by combinators that expect quoted programs
on the stack and execute them in various ways.  In Joypy they work by
changing the pending expression that the interpreter is about to execute.
In concrete terms, the combinators could work by making recursive calls
to the interpreter and all intermediate state would be held in the call
stack of the implementation language, in this Joypy implementation they
work instead by changing the pending expression and intermediate state
is put there.

As I study Joy I find that it is very aptly named.  It is clear, concise,
and ameniable to advanced techniques for constructing bug-free software.

Developed by Manfred von Thun, don't know much about him, not much on
the web about Joy and von Thun (Von Thun?) See references below.

Because it has desirable properties (concise, highly factored) the
programming process changes, the ratio of designing to writing code
shifts in favor of design.  The documentation becomes extensive while
the code shrinks to stable bodies of small well-factored incantations
that are highly expressive, much like mathematical papers consist of
large bodies of exposition interlaced with mathematical formula that
concisely and precisely express the meaning of the text.

The time and attention of the programmer shifts from thinking about the
language to thinking in the language, and the development process feels
more like deriving mathematical truths than like writing ad-hoc
solutions.

I hope that this package is useful in the sense that it provides an
additional joy interpreter (the binary in the archive from La Trobe seems
to run just fine on my modern Linux machine!)  But I also hope that you
can read and understand the Python code and play with the implementation
itself.

The best source (no pun intended) for learning about Joy is the
information made available at the website of La Trobe University (see the
references section below for the URL) which contains source code for the
original C interpreter, Joy language source code for various functions,
and a great deal of fascinating material mostly written by Von Thun on
Joy and its deeper facets as well as how to program in it and several
interesting aspects.  It's quite a treasure trove.


§ Installation

From PyPI in the usual way, e.g.:

    pip install joypy

Or if you have downloaded the source, from the joypy directory:

    python ./setup.py install

Or you can run the module from the joypy directory (see below.)

To start a crude REPL:

    python -m joy


§ Basics of Joy

Joy is stack-based.  There is a main stack that holds data items:
integers, floats, strings, functions, and sequences or quotes which hold
data items themselves.

    23 1.8 'a string' "another" dup [21 18 /] [1 [2 [3]]]

A Joy expression is just a sequence of items, also called lists.
Sequences intended as programs are called "quoted programs".  The
evaluation proceeds by iterating through the terms in the expression,
putting all literals onto the main stack and executing functions as they
are encountered.  Functions receive the current stack and return the next
stack.

The main loop is very simple as most of the action happens through what
are called "combinators", which accept quoted programs on the stack and
run them in various ways.  These combinators factor specific patterns
that provide the effect of control-flow in other languages (such as ifte
which is like if..then..else..)  Combinators receive the current
expession in addition to the stack and return the next expression. As
mentioned above, the combinators in Joypy work by changing the pending
expression before returning it.

In general, where otherwise unspecified, the semantics of Joypy are that
of the underlying Python. That means, for example, that integers are
unbounded (whatever your machine can handle), strings cannot be added to
integers but can be multiplied, Boolean True and False are effectively
identical to ints 1 and 0, empty sequences are considered False, etc.

Nothing is done about Python exceptions currently, although it would be
possible to capture the stack and expression just before the exception
and build a robust and flexible error handler.  Because they are both
just datastructures, you could immediately retry them under a debugger,
or edit either or both of the stack and expression.  All state is in one
or the other.

§ Literals and Simple Functions

    joy? 1 2 3
    -> 3 2 1

    joy? +
    -> 5 1

    joy? +
    -> 6

    joy? 7
    -> 7 6

    joy? *
    -> 42

    joy?


§ Simple Combinators

    joy? 23 [0 >] [dup --] while

    -> 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23


TODO:

§ Definitions and More Elaborate Functions
  Refactoring

§ Programming and Metaprogramming

§ Further Reading


--------------------------------------------------


This Implementation

Run with:

    python -m joy

joypy
 |-- COPYING - license
 |-- README - this file
 |
 |-- archive - info on Joy
 |   |-- Joy-Programming.zip
 |   `-- README
 |
 |-- docs - Various Examples and Demos
 |   |-- * - Jupyter Notebooks on Joypy and supporting modules
 |   `-- README - Table of Contents
 |
 |-- joy
 |   |-- joy.py - main loop, REPL
 |   |-- library.py - Functions, Combinators, Definitions
 |   |-- parser.py - convert text to Joy datastructures
 |   |
 |   `-- utils
 |       |-- pretty_print.py - convert Joy datastructures to text
 |       `-- stack.py - work with stacks
 |
 `-- setup.py


--------------------------------------------------


References


Wikipedia entry for Joy:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joy_%28programming_language%29


Homepage at La Trobe University:
http://www.latrobe.edu.au/humanities/research/research-projects/past-projects/joy-programming-language


Misc...

Stack based - literals (as functions) - functions - combinators -
Refactoring and making new definitions - traces and comparing
performance - metaprogramming as programming, even the lowly integer
range function can be expressed in two phases: building a specialized
program and then executing it with a combinator - ?Partial evaluation?
- ?memoized dynamic dependency graphs? - algebra

About

Automatically exported from code.google.com/p/joypy

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published