Build Your Own .NET Language and Compiler by Edward G. Nilges

Build Your Own .NET Language and Compiler



Build Your Own .NET Language and Compiler book




Build Your Own .NET Language and Compiler Edward G. Nilges ebook
Publisher: Apress
ISBN: 1590591348, 9781590591345
Format: chm
Page: 408


One interesting example NET CLR (and other platforms). He discusses a high level concept of a compiler and proceeds to invent his own langauge for the . You wouldn't build your whole system with a DSL, but, like the 5ESS switch, you could use it to code a critical function in a way that is easier to understand and maintain and, therefore, ensure its quality. I will start with a language definition, explore compiler architecture, and then walk you through the code generation subsystem that spits out a .NET assembly. That's a nice position to be in. I am looking into the same concept, and found this promising article by Joel Pobar,. I think some people thought I was joking earlier today when I said that we have our own compiler, Wasabi, for FogBugz. Most web developers are either building things for one customer, or they're building web apps that they will host themselves. But most FogBugz customers don't want their proprietary project data on NET, but then I'd have to pay engineers to install Mono for all our Unix customers, and the . NET Framework APIs that are required to build your own .NET compiler. Create a Language Compiler for the .NET Framework. If a project requires lots of concurrency/parallelism, its own language, or lots of math, you should think functional programming. Nilges, Build Your Own .NET Language and Compiler ISBN: 1590591348 | edition 2004 | CHM | 388 pages | 9 mb This practical book presents. Functional languages are killer at creating DSLs.