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Some apps written in SubX and Mu. Check out:

* `tile`: [A text-mode postfix calculator](https://mastodon.social/@akkartik/104896128141863951)
  that updates as you type. Prototype. Look at this to see what is currently
  possible, not how I recommend building software.

  <img alt='tile app' src='../html/rpn5.png' width='500px'>

* `browse`: [A text-mode browser for a tiny subset of Markdown](https://mastodon.social/@akkartik/104845344081779025).

* `ex*`: small stand-alone examples that don't need any of the shared code at
  the top-level. They each have a simple pedagogical goal. Try these first.

* `factorial*`: A simple program to compute factorials in 5 versions, showing
  all the different syntax sugars and what they expand to.

* Code unique to phases of our build toolchain:
  * Core SubX: `hex`, `survey`, `pack`, `dquotes`, `assort`, `tests`
  * Syntax sugar for SubX: `sigils`, `calls`, `braces`
  * More ambitious translator for a memory-safe language (in progress): `mu`

* Miscellaneous test programs.

All SubX apps include binaries. At any commit, an example's binary should be
identical bit for bit with the result of translating the corresponding `.subx`
file. The binary should also be natively runnable on a Linux system running on
Intel x86 processors, either 32- or 64-bit. If either of these invariants is
broken, it's a bug.