Seed7 is an extensible general-purpose programming language designed by Thomas Mertes. It is syntactically similar to Pascal and Ada. Along with many other features, it provides an extension mechanism.[2] Seed7 supports introducing new syntax elements and their semantics into the language, and allows new language constructs to be defined and written in Seed7.[3] For example, programmers can introduce syntax and semantics of new statements and user defined operator symbols. The implementation of Seed7 differs significantly from that of languages with hard-coded syntax and semantics.
Paradigm | multi-paradigm: extensible, object-oriented, imperative, structured, generic, reflective |
---|---|
Designed by | Thomas Mertes |
First appeared | 2005 |
Stable release | 2024-08-12
/ 101 days ago[1] |
Typing discipline | static, strong, safe, nominative, manifest |
OS | Cross-platform: BSD, Linux, OS X, Unix, Windows |
License | GPL, LGPL (for the runtime library) |
Filename extensions | .sd7, .s7i |
Website | seed7 |
Major implementations | |
open source reference implementation | |
Influenced by | |
Pascal, Modula-2, Ada, ALGOL 68, C, C++, Java |
Features
editSeed7 supports the programming paradigms: imperative, object-oriented (OO), and generic. It also supports features such as call by name, multiple dispatch, function overloading, operator overloading, exception handling and arbitrary-precision arithmetic.
Major features include:
- User defined statements and operators
- Abstract data types
- Templates without special syntax
- Object-oriented with interfaces and multiple dispatch
- Static typing
- May be interpreted or compiled
- Source code portability via supplied libraries that provide a common interface to different operating systems and windowing systems.
- Runs under BSD, Linux, Mac OS X, Unix, Windows
Several programming language concepts are generalized:
- Type declarations (which assign a name to a type) and function definitions take the form of constant definitions.
- Compile-time expressions can execute user-defined functions.
- Overloading and object-orientation (with multiple dispatch) are seen as common concepts. They just happen at different times: compile time and run time, respectively.
- Type names and type descriptions can be used as parameter and function result.
- Functions, which are executed at compile time, can be used to define objects.
- Templates are written as compile time functions with type parameters.
- Arrays, hash maps and structs are not a hard-coded feature. Instead they are defined as abstract data type in libraries.
- Parser and interpreter are part of the runtime library.
- UTF-32 Unicode support. This avoids problems of variable-length encodings like UTF-8 and UTF-16.
The Seed7 project includes both an interpreter and a compiler. The interpreter starts programs very quickly, supporting fast program development. The compiler uses the parser and reflection interfaces from the run-time library to generate a C program, which is subsequently compiled to machine code. Compiled Seed7 programs can have comparable performance to C programs.[4]
Features omitted
edit- Macros and a preprocessor
- Modules and namespaces
- Manual memory management
- Pointers and NULL
- Regular expressions
- Default function parameters
Libraries
editSeed7 has many libraries, covering areas including containers, numeric functions, lexical analysis, file manipulation, networking (sockets, Transport Layer Security (TLS/SSL), Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP), HTTP Secure (HTTPS), File Transfer Protocol (FTP), Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP), etc.), graphics, pixmap and vector fonts, database independent API, Common Gateway Interface (CGI) support, data compression, archive files (tar, zip, cpio, ar, rpm), character encoding, time and date handling, XML processing, message digests and more.[5] These libraries reduce the need to use unportable operating system features and third-party libraries (which might not always be present) directly. Seed7 libraries contain abstraction layers for hardware, operating system and third-party libraries, e.g. graphic and database libraries. In other words, no changes are needed to move Seed7 programs between different processors or operating systems.
TLS library
editSeed7 has its own implementation of Transport Layer Security.[6] The library includes AES and elliptic-curve cryptography.
Database abstraction API
editSeed7 provides a library with a database independent API.[7] Programs can connect to MySQL, MariaDB, SQLite, PostgreSQL, Oracle, Open Database Connectivity (ODBC), Firebird, InterBase, IBM Db2 and SQL Server databases. Independent from the database prepared statements can be created, bind variables can be used, the statements can be executed and result sets can be fetched.
History
editSeed7 is based on MASTER, an extensible programming language described in the diploma and doctoral theses of Thomas Mertes.[8][9] Most of the original ideas of MASTER, such as user defined statements and operators, can be found in Seed7. A precompiler, to translate MASTER to Pascal, was proposed, but unimplemented, in the original project. In 1989, development began on an interpreter for MASTER, named HAL. In 2005, the MASTER and HAL projects were released as open source under the Seed7 project name. Since then new versions have been released every two or three weeks. As of version 2021-04-25 the Seed7 project contains more than 500,000 source lines of code and several hundred pages of documentation.
Mertes has said that the name Seed7 came from the concept of his ideas for the language being spread as seeds that would grow as others used it. The "7" part was added because it was a prime number that he felt sounded good with "seed".[10]
Extension mechanism
editAn extension includes two parts: a syntax definition, giving a template for the new syntactic form, and a standard Seed7 function, used to define the semantics.[2]
Syntax definition
editThe syntax definition uses the Seed7 Structured Syntax Description (S7SSD). A S7SSD statement like
$ syntax expr: .(). + .() is -> 7;
specifies the syntax of the +
operator. The right arrow ->
describes the associativity: Binding of operands from left to right. With 7
the priority of the +
operator is defined. The syntax pattern .(). + .()
is introduced and delimited with dots (.
). Without dots the pattern is () + ()
. The symbol ()
is a nonterminal symbol and +
is a terminal symbol.[11] The S7SSD does not distinguish between different nonterminal symbols. Instead it only knows one nonterminal symbol: ()
.
Semantic extension
editThe definition of the +
operator for complex numbers is just a function definition:
const func complex: (in complex: summand1) + (in complex: summand2) is func
result
var complex: sum is complex.value;
begin
sum.re := summand1.re + summand2.re;
sum.im := summand1.im + summand2.im;
end func;
References
edit- ^ Mertes, Thomas (12 August 2024). "New Seed7 Release 2024-08-12". Retrieved 16 August 2024 – via SourceForge.
- ^ a b Daniel Zingaro, "Modern Extensible Languages", SQRL Report 47 McMaster University (October 2007), page 16 (alternate link).
- ^ Abrial, Jean-Raymond and Glässer, Uwe, "Rigorous Methods for Software Construction and Analysis", ISBN 978-3-642-11446-5, Springer, 2010, page 166.
- ^ Stadfeld, Paul (1 April 2010). "The Quest for the Ultimate Cycle (includes a performance comparison between Python, Seed7 and C)". Archived from the original on 25 October 2013. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
- ^ Seed7 libraries
- ^ A Transport Layer Security (TLS) library written in Seed7
- ^ Database abstraction API
- ^ Mertes, Thomas, "Entwurf einer erweiterbaren höheren Programmiersprache", Diploma thesis Vienna University of Technology (1984).(Abstract)
- ^ Mertes, Thomas, "Definition einer erweiterbaren höheren Programmiersprache", Doctoral thesis Vienna University of Technology (1986).(Abstract)
- ^ "Coding Club: Presents - Seed7". YouTube. July 4, 2024. Retrieved July 22, 2024.
- ^ David Gudeman (March 26, 2015), "The Seed7 Programming Language" (In Seed7 you can specify a syntax like this)
External links
edit- Official website - Homepage with FAQ, manual, screenshots, examples, library descriptions, benchmarks and a set of algorithms
- Mirror of the Seed7 Homepage
- Seed7 at GitHub
- Download Seed7 from its main repository at SourceForge
- Seed7 at Rosetta Code - Contains many Seed7 examples
- The Quest for the Ultimate Cycle explores the 3n+C extension of the Collatz Conjecture with Seed7 programs
- Blog by Remo Laubacher: Statically linked Linux executables with GCJ, Seed7 and haXe (2011)
- Blog by David Gudeman The Seed7 Programming Language (2015)
- A FreeBSD port / see also here, maintained by Pietro Cerutti
- An OpenBSD port, provided by Brian Callahan
- A Seed7 package for openSUSE/Fedora, (see also here or here)
- A discussion where Seed7 is described as language where new syntax can actually be defined by language users
- Seed7 at "Fossies" - the Fresh Open Source Software Archive