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  2. ZeroBrane Studio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ZeroBrane_Studio

    ZeroBrane Studio is a cross-platform application written in Lua that runs on Windows (Windows XP+), Linux, and macOS (10.9+) operating systems. It uses the wxWidgets toolkit and the Scintilla component for file editing.

  3. Lua (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lua_(programming_language)

    Lua is cross-platform software, since the interpreter of compiled bytecode is written in ANSI C, [4] and Lua has a relatively simple C application programming interface to embed it into applications. [5] Lua originated in 1993 as a language for extending software applications to meet the

  4. LuaJIT - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LuaJIT

    The interpreter bytecode is frequently patched by the JIT compiler, often to begin executing a compiled trace or to mark a segment of bytecode for causing too many trace aborts. [ 15 ] -- Loop with if-statement local x = 0 for i = 1 , 1e4 do x = x + 11 if i % 10 == 0 then -- if-statement x = x + 22 end x = x + 33 end

  5. LuaRocks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LuaRocks

    LuaRocks allows installing Lua modules to standard Lua paths as well as to customized locations. For this reason, it is possible to use it to install extensions to any project that uses standard Lua modules, such as the Awesome window manager. Some projects, however, adopted LuaRocks as their recommended solution for managing extensions ...

  6. Anaconda (Python distribution) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anaconda_(Python_distribution)

    Anaconda, Inc. compiles and builds the packages available in the Anaconda repository itself, and provides binaries for Windows 32/64 bit, Linux 64 bit and MacOS 64-bit (Intel, Apple Silicon). Anything available on PyPI may be installed into a Conda environment using pip, and Conda will keep track of what it has installed and what pip has installed.

  7. SWIG - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SWIG

    The Simplified Wrapper and Interface Generator (SWIG) is an open-source software tool used to connect computer programs or libraries written in C or C++ with scripting languages such as Lua, Perl, PHP, Python, R, Ruby, Tcl, and other language implementations like C#, Java, JavaScript, Go, D, OCaml, Octave, Scilab and Scheme.

  8. PyPy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PyPy

    The PyPy interpreter compatible with CPython v3 is also known as PyPy3. PyPy has JIT compilation support on 32-bit/64-bit x86 and 32-bit/64-bit ARM processors. [15] It is tested nightly on Windows, Linux, OpenBSD and Mac OS X. PyPy is able to run pure Python software that does not rely on implementation-specific features. [16]

  9. Yabasic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yabasic

    Yabasic (Yet Another BASIC) is a free, open-source BASIC interpreter for Microsoft Windows and Unix platforms. [2] Yabasic was originally developed by Marc-Oliver Ihm, who released the last stable version 2.77.3 in 2016.