84996130b7b8bb6b5ab6552a22bd024bc6ae6565
LOG, LOG_ERR. LOG_ERR will always compile to a /stderr/ print. LOG, on the other hand, may not actually do anything if VERBOSE_LOGS is not 1. By default it is 0, so it must be defined when compiling to enable - hence the adjustment of the Makefile.
┌───────────────────────┐ │ _ ____ _ │ │ / \ | _ \| | │ │ / _ \ | |_) | | │ │ / ___ \| _ <| |___ │ │ /_/ \_\_| \_\_____| │ └───────────────────────┘ Similar to Forth. Compiles to C. Native speed with simple semantics. ----- Goals ----- - Complete operational transpiler to C - Ability to reuse compiled code (as object code) in top level ARL code. - Static type system with informative errors ------------- Issue tracker ------------- See arl.org. ------------ Requirements ------------ - C compiler with support for C23, accessible via PATH - GNU Make ------------------ Build instructions ------------------ $ make ... will generate a binary "arlc.out" in the build folder, which may be used to compile ".arl" files into native code. $ make MODE=debug ... will generate a debug binary that may be used for further examination and logging. You may specify the folder build artifacts are generated in by setting the DIST variable in your make invocation i.e. $ make DIST=<folder> Similarly, the general flags used in the C compiler may be set via the CFLAGS variable, with linking arguments set via the LDFLAGS variable.
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C
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Makefile
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