Date: Fri, 11 Sep 92 22:08:24 -0400 From: jmiller@crl.dec.com To: distribution.;@easynet.crl.dec.com@easynet.crl.dec.com@crl.dec.com (see end of body) Subject: "Thomas" system now available Reply-To: JMiller@crl.dec.com Thomas, a compiler written at Digital Equipment Corporation's Cambridge Research Laboratory, is now available to the public. Thomas compiles a language compatible with the language described in the book "Dylan(TM) an object-oriented dynamic language" by Apple Computer Eastern Research and Technology, April 1992. The Thomas system is written in Scheme and is available to run under any one of three public implementations of Scheme: MIT's CScheme, DEC's Scheme->C, and Marc Feeley's Gambit. It can run on a wide range of machines including the Macintosh, PC compatibles, Vax, MIPS, Alpha, and 680x0. Thomas generates IEEE compatible Scheme code. The entire system (including sources) is available by anonymous ftp from: crl.dec.com:pub/DEC/Thomas gatekeeper.pa.dec.com:pub/DEC/Thomas altdorf.ai.mit.edu:archive/Thomas In building Thomas, our goals (in order of priority) were: (1) To learn about the Dylan(TM) language, by building an implementation based solely on the description in the book. (2) To help others learn about the language by producing source code for an implementation that was well structured, easy to read, and was publically available. (3) To build a system we could use to actually write small Dylan(TM) programs, to get a feel for the language through using it. We feel we have met these three goals as well as can be expected in a four week project with three people. It was never our intention to produce an implementation that performs well, and Thomas has no optimizations of any kind. It does not perform well. This reflects our goals and not necessarily the design of the language itself. Thomas is NOT Dylan(TM). We have not received approval for the use of the trademark, and we have not received a copy of a test suite other than the examples from the book itself. We may, at some future date, pursue these issues with Apple. The Thomas system was built with no direct input, aid, assistance or discussion with Apple. All design and implementation decisions in Thomas reflect choices by the Thomas implementors based on reading the book published by Apple. These decisions must not be construed in any way as deriving from Apple Computer Corporation or its employees. We have made every effort to minimize the differences between Thomas and Dylan(TM), and to remove bugs, but help from others would be greatly appreciated. The original development team consisted of: Matt Birkholz (Birkholz@crl.dec.com) Jim Miller (JMiller@crl.dec.com) Ron Weiss (RWeiss@crl.dec.com) In addition, Joel Bartlett (Bartlett@wrl.dec.com), Marc Feeley (Feeley@iro.umontreal.ca), Guillermo Rozas (Jinx@zurich.ai.mit.edu) and Ralph Swick (Swick@crl.dec.com) contributed time and energy to the initial release. %%% overflow headers %%% To: scheme@mc.lcs.mit.edu, crl, dylan-comments@cambridge.apple.com, rrrs-authors@martigny.ai.mit.edu, meehan@src.dec.com, bartlett@wrl.dec.com, comp.compilers.usenet, comp.object.usenet, comp.programming.usenet, comp.sources.d.usenet, comp.lang.functional.usenet, comp.lang.c++.usenet, comp.lang.clos.usenet, comp.lang.lisp.usenet, comp.lang.modula3.usenet %%% end overflow headers %%%