=========================================== Questions and Answers =========================================== General ======= What is Nimrod? --------------- Nimrod is a statically typed, imperative programming language that tries to give the programmer ultimate power without compromises on runtime efficiency. This means it focuses on compile-time mechanisms in all their various forms. Beneath a nice infix/indentation based syntax with a powerful (AST based, hygienic) macro system lies a semantic model that supports a soft realtime GC on thread local heaps. Asynchronous message passing is used between threads, so no "stop the world" mechanism is necessary. An unsafe shared memory heap is also provided for the increased efficiency that results from that model. Why yet another programming language? ------------------------------------- Nimrod is one of the very few *programmable* statically typed languages, and one of the even fewer that produces native binaries that require no runtime or interpreter. What is Nimrod's take on concurrency? ------------------------------------- Nimrod primarily focusses on thread local (and garbage collected) heaps and asynchronous message passing between threads. Each thread has its own GC, so no "stop the world" mechanism is necessary. An unsafe shared memory heap is also provided. Future versions will additionally include a GC "per thread group" and Nimrod's type system will be enhanced to accurately model this shared memory heap. How is Nimrod licensed? ----------------------- The Nimrod compiler and the library are MIT licensed. This means that you can use any license for your own programs developed with Nimrod. How stable is Nimrod? --------------------- The compiler is in development and some important features are still missing. However, the compiler is quite stable already: It is able to compile itself and a substantial body of other code. Until version 1.0.0 is released, minor incompatibilities with older versions of the compiler will be introduced. How fast is Nimrod? ------------------- Benchmarks show it to be comparable to C. Some language features (methods, closures, message passing) are not yet as optimized as they could and will be. The only overhead Nimrod has over C is the GC which has been tuned for years but still needs some work. What about JVM/CLR backends? ---------------------------- A JVM backend is almost impossible. The JVM is not expressive enough. It has never been designed as a general purpose VM anyway. A CLR backend is possible but would require much work. What about editor support? -------------------------- - Nimrod IDE: https://github.com/nimrod-code/Aporia - Emacs: https://github.com/Tass/nimrod-mode - Vim: https://github.com/zah/nimrod.vim/ - Scite: Included - Gedit: The `Aporia .lang file `_ - jEdit: https://github.com/exhu/nimrod-misc/tree/master/jedit Why is it named ``proc``? ------------------------- *Procedure* used to be the common term as opposed to a *function* which is a mathematical entity that has no side effects. It was planned to have ``func`` as syntactic sugar for ``proc {.noSideEffect.}`` but the more fine-grained effect system makes that unimportant. Compilation =========== Which option to use for the fastest executable? ----------------------------------------------- For the standard configuration file, ``-d:release`` does the trick. Which option to use for the smallest executable? ------------------------------------------------ For the standard configuration file, ``-d:quick --opt:size`` does the trick. How do I use a different C compiler than the default one? --------------------------------------------------------- Edit the ``config/nimrod.cfg`` file. Change the value of the ``cc`` variable to one of the following: ============== ============================================ Abbreviation C/C++ Compiler ============== ============================================ ``dmc`` Digital Mars C++ ``vcc`` Microsoft's Visual C++ ``gcc`` Gnu C ``tcc`` Tiny C ``llvm_gcc`` LLVM-GCC compiler ``icc`` Intel C++ compiler ``ucc`` Generic UNIX C compiler ============== ============================================ If your C compiler is not in the above list, try using the *generic UNIX C compiler* (``ucc``). If the C compiler needs different command line arguments try the ``--passc`` and ``--passl`` switches.