Scheme-to-C - définition. Qu'est-ce que Scheme-to-C
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est Scheme-to-C - définition

SOFTWARE WHICH INTERPRETS AND COMPILES SCHEME CODE INTO C CODE
Gambit-C; Termite scheme; Gambit (scheme implementation)

Scheme-to-C      
<language> A Scheme compiler written in C that emits C and is embeddable in C. Scheme-to-C was written by Joel Bartlett of Digital Western Research Laboratory. Version 15mar93 translates a superset of Revised**4 Scheme to C that is then compiled by the native C compiler for the {target machine}. This design results in a portable system that allows either stand-alone Scheme programs or programs written in both compiled and interpreted Scheme and other languages. It supports "expansion passing style" macros, {foreign function} calls, records, and interfaces to Xlib (Ezd and Scix). Scheme-to-C runs on VAX, ULTRIX, DECstation, Alpha AXP OSF/1, Windows 3.1, Apple Macintosh 7.1, HP 9000/300, HP 9000/700, Sony News, SGI Iris and Harris Nighthawk, and other Unix-like 88000 systems. The earlier 01nov91 version runs on Amiga, SunOS, NeXT, and Apollo systems. Scheme-to-C/">ftp://gatekeeper.dec.com/pub/DEC/Scheme-to-C/. (2000-05-24)
R4RS         
DIALECT OF THE LISP PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE
Scheme Links; R5RS; R4RS; R6RS; Set!; Scheme Programming language; Scheme progamming language; Scheme programming language; R5RS Scheme; Err5rs; ERR5RS; Scheme language; LAML; Scheme (language); RnRS; R7RS; Dr. Scheme; Scheme Lisp
A revision of R3RS, revised in R3.99RS. ftp://altdorf.ai.mit.edu/. ["The Revised^4 Report on the Algorithmic Language Scheme", W. Clinger et al, MIT (Nov 1991)]. (1994-10-28) [Later revisions?]
MIT Scheme         
A SCHEME IMPLEMENTATION WITH INTEGRATED EDITOR AND DEBUGGER
MIT Scheme; Edwin (editor); Mit-scheme
<language> (Previously "C-Scheme") A Scheme implementation by the MIT Scheme Team (Chris Hanson, Jim Miller, Bill Rozas, and many others) with a rich set of utilities, a compiler called Liar and an editor called Edwin. MIT Scheme includes an interpreter, large {run-time library}, Emacs macros, native-code compiler, emacs-like editor, and a source-level debugger. Latest version: 7.7.1, as of 2002-06-18. MIT Scheme conforms fully with R4RS and almost with the IEEE Scheme standard. It runs on Motorola 68000: HP9000, Sun-3, NeXT; MIPS: Decstation, Sony, SGI; HP-PA: 600, 700, 800; VAX: Ultrix, BSD, DEC Alpha: OSF; Intel i386: MS-DOS, MS Windows, and various other Unix systems. See also: LAP, Schematik, Scode. scheme/">http://gnu.org/software/mit-scheme/. Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.lang.scheme.c. Mailing list: mit-scheme-announce@gnu.org (cross-posted to news). E-mail: <mit-scheme-devel@gnu.org> (maintainers). (2003-08-14)

Wikipédia

Gambit (Scheme implementation)

Gambit, also called Gambit-C, is a programming language, a variant of the language family Lisp, and its variants named Scheme. The Gambit implementation consists of a Scheme interpreter, and a compiler which compiles Scheme into the language C, which makes it cross-platform software. It conforms to the standards R4RS, R5RS, and Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE), and to several Scheme Requests for Implementations (SRFIs). Gambit was released first in 1988, and Gambit-C (Gambit with a C backend) was released first in 1994. They are free and open-source software released under a GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) 2.1, and Apache License 2.0.

By compiling to an intermediate representation, in this case portable C (as do Chicken, Bigloo and Cyclone), programs written in Gambit can be compiled for common popular operating systems such as Linux, macOS, other Unix-like systems, and Windows.