Shell scripting with a modern feel.
Bish is a lightweight language created to bring shell scripting into the 21st century. It gives programmers the comfort of modern syntax but compiles to Bash, resulting in good portability (in as much as Bash is portable).
Currently, Bish is still a very new language. I am adding new features as fast as I can, but it is bound not to support something you might like. In that case, see if you can implement it and submit a pull request!
As a side note, I won't stop you, but you would probably be crazy to use Bish in any sort of production environment until it stabilizes a bit more.
def fib(n) {
if (n < 2) {
return 1;
}
return fib(n-1) + fib(n-2);
}
def printall(files) {
for (f in files) {
print(f);
}
}
# cwd, ls, and cd are all builtin functions.
dir = cwd();
files = ls();
print("Files in current directory $dir:");
printall(files);
cd("/");
print("Files in root directory:");
printall(ls());
Just clone and build with 'make'. There are no dependencies other than the C++ standard library. Compile bish to bash with the command:
$ ./bish input.bish > output.bash
Then run the compiled file:
$ bash output.bash
I can't count the number of times when I wanted to write a quick shell script to automate an easy task, only to waste hours tracking down idiosyncracies in Bash syntax and semantics. Bish tries to fill this niche: when you want a lightweight shell scripting language and don't wish to break out the larger hammer of Python, Perl, etc...
However, I created this language first and foremost as a weekend project and exercise in writing a compiler from scratch. I've dealt with pieces of compilers before, but have never written one from start to finish. Thus, I hope this project can also serve as a good teaching tool. I tried to design it with clarity in mind, so it should be simple to extend the language, or write a new back end.
The language and compiler are pretty bare-bones as of now. A selection of things I intend to do:
- Improve parsing error messages
- Implement type checking
- Figure out what to do about floats
- Expand standard library of builtin functions