Mal is a Clojure inspired Lisp interpreter.
Mal is implemented in 26 different languages:
- Bash shell
- C
- C#
- Clojure
- CoffeeScript
- Forth
- Go
- Haskell
- Java
- Javascript (Online Demo)
- Lua
- GNU Make
- mal itself
- MATLAB
- miniMAL
- OCaml
- Perl
- PHP
- Postscript
- Python
- R
- Racket
- Ruby
- Rust
- Scala
- Visual Basic.NET
Mal is a learning tool. Each implementation of mal is separated into 11 incremental, self-contained (and testable) steps that demonstrate core concepts of Lisp. The last step is capable of self-hosting (running the mal implemenation of mal).
The mal (make a lisp) steps are:
- step0_repl
- step1_read_print
- step2_eval
- step3_env
- step4_if_fn_do
- step5_tco
- step6_file
- step7_quote
- step8_macros
- step9_try
- stepA_mal
Mal was presented publicly for the first time in a lightning talk at Clojure West 2014 (unfortunately there is no video). See mal/clojurewest2014.mal for the presentation that was given at the conference (yes the presentation is a mal program).
cd bash
bash stepX_YYY.sh
The C implementation of mal requires the following libraries (lib and header packages): glib, libffi6 and either the libedit or GNU readline library.
cd c
make
./stepX_YYY
The C# implementation of mal has been tested on Linux using the Mono C# compiler (mcs) and the Mono runtime (version 2.10.8.1). Both are required to build and run the C# implementation.
cd cs
make
mono ./stepX_YYY.exe
cd clojure
lein with-profile +stepX trampoline run
sudo npm install -g coffee-script
cd coffee
coffee ./stepX_YYY
cd forth
gforth stepX_YYY.fs
You Go implementation of mal requires that go is installed on on the path. The implementation has been tested with Go 1.3.1.
cd go
make
./stepX_YYY
Install the Haskell compiler (ghc/ghci), the Haskell platform and either the editline package (BSD) or the readline package (GPL). On Ubuntu these packages are: ghc, haskell-platform, libghc-readline-dev/libghc-editline-dev
cd haskell
make
./stepX_YYY
The Java implementation of mal requires maven2 to build.
cd java
mvn compile
mvn -quiet exec:java -Dexec.mainClass=mal.stepX_YYY
# OR
mvn -quiet exec:java -Dexec.mainClass=mal.stepX_YYY -Dexec.args="CMDLINE_ARGS"
cd js
npm update
node stepX_YYY.js
Running the Lua implementation of mal requires lua 5.1 or later, luarocks and the lua-rex-pcre library installed.
cd lua
make # to build and link linenoise.so
./stepX_YYY.lua
Running the mal implementation of mal involves running stepA of one of the other implementations and passing the mal step to run as a command line argument.
cd IMPL
IMPL_STEPA_CMD ../mal/stepX_YYY.mal
cd make
make -f stepX_YYY.mk
cd ocaml
make
./stepX_YYY
The MATLAB implementation of mal has been tested with MATLAB version R2014a on Linux. Note that MATLAB is a commercial product. It should be fairly simple to support GNU Octave once it support classdef object syntax.
cd matlab
./stepX_YYY
matlab -nodisplay -nosplash -nodesktop -nojvm -r "stepX_YYY();quit;"
# OR with command line arguments
matlab -nodisplay -nosplash -nodesktop -nojvm -r "stepX_YYY('arg1','arg2');quit;"
miniMAL is small Lisp interpreter implemented in less than 1024 bytes of JavaScript. To run the miniMAL implementation of mal you need to download/install the miniMAL interpreter (which requires Node.js).
# Download miniMAL itself
git clone https://github.com/kanaka/miniMAL ../miniMAL.git
export PATH=`pwd`/miniMAL.git:$PATH
# Now run mal implementated in miniMAL
cd miniMAL
miniMAL ./stepX_YYY
For readline line editing support, install Term::ReadLine::Perl or Term::ReadLine::Gnu from CPAN.
cd perl
perl stepX_YYY.pl
The PHP implementation of mal requires the php command line interface to run.
cd php
php stepX_YYY.php
The Postscript implementation of mal requires ghostscript to run. It has been tested with ghostscript 9.10.
cd ps
gs -q -dNODISPLAY -I./ stepX_YYY.ps
cd python
python stepX_YYY.py
The R implementation of mal requires R (r-base-core) to run.
cd r
make libs # to download and build rdyncall
Rscript stepX_YYY.r
The Racket implementation of mal requires the Racket compiler/interpreter to run.
cd racket
./stepX_YYY.rb
cd ruby
ruby stepX_YYY.rb
The rust implementation of mal requires the rust compiler and build tool (cargo) to build.
cd rust
# Need patched pcre lib (should be temporary)
git clone https://github.com/kanaka/rust-pcre cadencemarseille-pcre
cargo build
./target/stepX_YYY
Install scala and sbt (http://www.scala-sbt.org/0.13/tutorial/Installing-sbt-on-Linux.html):
cd scala
sbt 'run-main stepX_YYY'
# OR
sbt compile
scala -classpath target/scala*/classes stepX_YYY
The VB.NET implementation of mal has been tested on Linux using the Mono VB compiler (vbnc) and the Mono runtime (version 2.10.8.1). Both are required to build and run the VB.NET implementation.
cd vb
make
mono ./stepX_YYY.exe
The are nearly 500 generic Mal tests (for all implementations) in the
tests/
directory. Each step has a corresponding test file containing
tests specific to that step. The runtest.py
test harness uses
pexpect to launch a Mal step implementation and then feeds the tests
one at a time to the implementation and compares the output/return
value to the expected output/return value.
To simplify the process of running tests, a top level Makefile is provided with convenient test targets.
- To run all the tests across all implementations (be prepared to wait):
make test
- To run all tests against a single implementation:
make test^IMPL
# e.g.
make test^clojure
make test^js
- To run tests for a single step against all implementations:
make test^stepX
# e.g.
make test^step2
make test^step7
- To run a specifc step against a single implementation:
make test^IMPL^stepX
# e.g
make test^ruby^step3
make test^ps^step4
Mal (make-a-lisp) is licensed under the MPL 2.0 (Mozilla Public License 2.0). See LICENSE.txt for more details.