Natscript Interpreter
This is Natscript, a custom cross-platform, dynamic interpreted language with a free, natural language-like syntax that lends itself to prosaic code, such as:
define function main as {
set squares to []
for each number in range from 0 to 5 not equal to 3 {
multiply it by itself, then append it to squares
}
return squares
}
# This will output [0, 1, 4, 16] to the console
print result of call main
The main implementation of the Natscript interpreter is currently written in Python, but may be shifted to C++ in the future for improved performance.
Available functionality
Currently available functionality includes:
- variables and operations
- conditionals
- loops (for-each, while)
- first-order functions
- module declarations and imports
- access modifiers (private, constant)
- recursion
- a bytecode compiler to speed up module loading
- precise stack traces for run-time exceptions
Language documentation can be found in the doc folder.
Getting started
To get a copy of this repository, clone it using git, then install all dependencies (currently none), as well as the natscript package itself:
git clone https://github.com/rbaltrusch/natscript
cd natscript
python -m pip install -r requirements.txt
python -m pip install -e .
To run the interpreter, run the natscript Python package, specifying a Natscript file to be executed, or nothing to enter an interactive shell session:
python -m natscript
python -m natscript doc\examples\helloworld.nat
Syntax highlighting
Github / Linguist
Currently, Natscript is in its early stages and not supported yet by Linguist (which, e.g. provides the syntax highlighting on Github). Powershell syntax highlighting seems to be an acceptable alternative.
Visual Studio Code
Language support in VS Code is in work, but not available yet. An early-stage VS Code extension with static syntax highlighting can be found here, but at the moment needs to be manually added to the VS Code extensions folder.
Notepad++
The syntax highlighting file for Natscript in Notepad++ can be found here. It can be imported to Notepad++ in the Languages menu (Languages -> User Language -> Define Your Language... -> Import).
Documentation
Language documentation, including examples and tutorials, can be found in the doc folder. It is currently a work in progress.
Examples
Below is one example of the natural syntax of Natscript:
define function fibonacci expecting [limit] as {
set old to 1
set current to 1
set numbers to [old current]
while checked that current is less than the limit {
set temp to current
add old to current then set old to temp
append current to numbers
}
return the numbers
}
define function main as {
return result of call fibonacci with [1000000]
}
# prints all fibonacci numbers from 1 to 1000000
call main and print result
A full list of code examples can be found here.
Tutorials
Tutorials can be found in the doc folder.
Interpreter CLI
The Natscript interpreter CLI has several configureable options:
usage: natscript [-h] [--debug] [--compile COMPILE] [--compiled-format {pickle,json}]
[--iterations ITERATIONS]
filepath
CLI for the Natscript interpreter
positional arguments:
filepath The path of the Natscript file to be run
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--debug, -d Enables the interpreter debug mode
--compile COMPILE, -c COMPILE
Enables the bytecode compiler
--compiled-format {pickle,json}, -f {pickle,json}
Specifies the format of the bytecode-compiled file
--iterations ITERATIONS, -i ITERATIONS
Specifies how often the script should be executed
The interpreter CLI help message can be shown by running:
python -m natscript -h