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  2. Glasgow Haskell Compiler - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glasgow_Haskell_Compiler

    The Glasgow Haskell Compiler (GHC) is a native or machine code compiler for the functional programming language Haskell. [5] It provides a cross-platform software environment for writing and testing Haskell code and supports many extensions, libraries , and optimisations that streamline the process of generating and executing code.

  3. Haskell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haskell

    Haskell 2010 is an incremental update to the language, mostly incorporating several well-used and uncontroversial features previously enabled via compiler-specific flags. Hierarchical module names. Module names are allowed to consist of dot-separated sequences of capitalized identifiers, rather than only one such identifier.

  4. C-- - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C--

    It translates C-- code into C code, allowing it to be compiled using standard C compilers. The Oregon Graduate Institute's C-- compiler (OGI C-- Compiler) is the earliest prototype C-- compiler, developed in 1997 using the ML programming language. Maintenance of the OGI C-- Compiler was discontinued once development of Quick C-- began.

  5. Gofer (programming language) - Wikipedia

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

    Gofer (Good for equational reasoning) is an implementation of the programming language Haskell intended for educational purposes and supporting a language based on version 1.2 of the Haskell report. It was replaced by Hugs. [1] Its syntax is closer to the earlier commercial language Miranda than the subsequently

  6. Bootstrapping (compilers) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bootstrapping_(compilers)

    Stage 0: preparing an environment for the bootstrap compiler to work with. This is where the source language and output language of the bootstrap compiler are chosen. In the case of a "bare machine" (one which has no compiler for any language) the source and output are written as binary machine code, or may be created by cross compiling on some ...

  7. Yhc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yhc

    The York Haskell Compiler (Yhc) is a no longer maintained [1] open source bytecode compiler for the functional programming language Haskell; it primarily targets the Haskell '98 standard. It is one of the four main Haskell compilers (behind GHC , Hugs and nhc98 ).

  8. Continuation-passing style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuation-passing_style

    Functional and logic compilers often use CPS as an intermediate representation where a compiler for an imperative or procedural programming language would use static single assignment form (SSA). [4] SSA is formally equivalent to a subset of CPS (excluding non-local control flow, which does not occur when CPS is used as intermediate ...

  9. Haskell features - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haskell_features

    Concurrent Haskell is an extension to Haskell that supports threads and synchronization. [7] GHC's implementation of Concurrent Haskell is based on multiplexing lightweight Haskell threads onto a few heavyweight operating system (OS) threads, [8] so that Concurrent Haskell programs run in parallel via symmetric multiprocessing. The runtime can ...