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Hello, friend. This is a JavaScript implementation of the Paws machine, intended both to be included into client-side code executed by browsers, and to be embedded into Node.js projects.

“What's a Paws,” you ask? Paws could be seen either as a type of programming language, or as a design for a VM on which languages of that type can be run. Paws is a project sitting somewhere between a pure VM for language development (think: the JVM), and a family of languages (think: the LISPs.)

Paws lends itself well to highly asynchronous programming, meaning it's designed for things involving the network requests (by design, web applications), and other tasks where concurrency is desirable. In addition, things built on top of Paws can distribute themselves across multiple environments and machines (this means your database, and your user's browsers, can all talk amongst one-another.) Finally, Paws is designed from the ground-up to be concurrency-aware, ensuring tasks can parallelize when they won't affect eachother negatively.

“Cool! Can I use it?” Probably not, I'm afraid, although it's adorable that you ask. Unfortunately, this project is basically just a VM, with some excruciatingly-primative primatives with which one can construct abstractions. (Writing code that will run on this machine is approximately analogous to writing raw assembler.) Before this project will be useful to you, somebody'll need to write some abstractions (basically, a language) on top of it!

To boot, the Paws system as a whole is still under heavy design and development; lots of things are still likely to change. Although there's a specification for the current version, lots of relatively fundamental aspects of the machine's semantics are still subject to evolution. In fact, some of the neatest features of the design aren't nailed down into the specification yet (nor are they implemented in this codebase); so anybody trying to write those abstractions for you is probably going to have some of their work invalidated in the future. tl;dr: the Paws design isn't stable, yet!

“Okay, well, I like language design. Can I write stuff on top of this machine?” I'm so glad you asked! You're my favourite kind of person! Assuming you understand the caveat mentioned above (that this project is in flux), you can absolutely start experimenting with abstractions on top of the Paws machine.

If you want to learn more, you should definitely grab yourself an IRC client (I suggest IRCCloud), or just click here, to join the chatroom where we discuss the Paws project as a whole: #ELLIOTTCABLE on Freenode. All newcomers are welcome, and contribution is hugely appreciated!

Using

This implementation of a Paws machine can be used in two ways: interactively, at the command-line; or directly, via its embedding API. More information about command-line usage can be acquired by querying the executable at the command-line:

npm install                     # (Must be run before the executable can be used)
./Executables/paws.js --help
./Executables/paws.js interact  # Example, opens an interactive ‘REPL’ to play with

As for embedding the Paws.js API, you'll have to dive into the code and poke around a bit, for the moment. I'm also happy to give you a quick overview, if you join our channel and ask!

(I swear, API documentation is coming soon! :P )

Contributing

I consistently put a lot of effort into ensuring that this codebase is easy to spelunk. Hell, I reduced myself to using CoffeeScript, to make everything easier to read! (=

Any and all issues / pull-requests are welcome. There's a rather comprehensive test-suite for the reactor itself; it's appreciated if any changes are contributed with passing test-cases, of course.

After git clone'ing the codebase, you should immediately npm run-script hi; this will help you set up your local copy for hacking.

More specific information can be found in CONTRIBUTING. (Well, eventually. >,>)


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