A Lisp dialect of Ruby.
Lisps are great, but I haven't found one usable enough (by my own standards) for scripting. Clojure is my favorite language from a design perpective, and the fact that you can leverage existing JVM libraries is super convenient. But there's just one problem -- its startup time is so slow.
Common Lisp is nice; it's a powerful Lisp, and it's fast. But it's not always easy to find X existing library to do Y thing, it's maybe a little too low-level for my liking, and the tooling situation is not so great.
Ruby is great for scripting, cross-platform, and has hella good libraries, but there's just one problem -- it's not a Lisp.
I've played around with the make-a-lisp guide a few times in the past to build Lisps for fun in languages like Rust. I thought it would be interesting to try and build for myself the convenient scripting Lisp that I always wanted. It turns out that it's super easy to write a Lisp interpreter, but it's awful time-consuming to build a whole language from scratch. I had a shower thought that the Ruby standard library can already do about 80% of the things a faithful Lisp should do, so maybe the path of least resistance to building the Lisp of my dreams is to write the interpreter in Ruby and totally cheat on all of the function implementations by delegating to functions and types that have already been implemented in the Ruby stdlib.
I think I was right. Check it out, everyone -- you can write your Ruby scripts in Lisp now!
NOTE: RubyLisp is still in early development. If you find something is broken or missing, please file an issue, or better yet, fork this repo, add/fix it yourself, and make a Pull Request!
- Syntax and stdlib functions heavily influenced by Clojure.
- Easy, convenient Ruby inter-op.
- Fire up a REPL or run it in a script.
- Immutable linked lists, vectors, and hashes courtesy of the Hamster library.
- Clojure-style atoms, courtesy of concurrent-ruby.
- (TODO) Clojure-style macros.
- (TODO) Clojure-style namespaces.
- (TODO) Dependency management / the ability to use some sort of build tool to include Ruby libraries and use them via inter-op.
Many of the affordances of the Clojure standard library are implemented as part
of the rbl.core
namespace, which is included by default:
user> (prn 'oh :hello "hi" 1 2.3 '(abc def) ['g ()] '{:h ijk})
oh :hello "hi" 1 2.3 (abc def) [g ()] {:h ijk}
nil
user> (take 20 (map inc (reverse (range 100))))
(101 100 99 98 97 96 95 94 93 92 91 90 89 88 87 86 85 84 83 82)
Members of Ruby modules and classes may be accessed in a familiar way, by appending ::
to the module or class:
user> Kernel::ARGV
[]
user> Encoding::Converter::CR_NEWLINE_DECORATOR
8192
user> File::SEPARATOR
"/"
Instance methods are called like Lisp functions. The reader will recognize any symbol that starts with .
as an instance method, and send it as a message to the second element in the S-expression.
For example, (.+ 1 2)
in RubyLisp is equivalent to 1.send(:+, 2)
in Ruby.
user> (def f (File::open "/tmp/ugh.txt"))
#<File:/tmp/ugh.txt>
user> (.methods f)
[:size :path :truncate :lstat :atime :mtime :ctime :birthtime :chmod :chown ...
:! :== :!= :__send__ :equal? :instance_eval :instance_exec :__id__]
user> (.readbyte f)
66
user> (.size f)
365
The list
function and quote
form (e.g. '(1 2 3)
) create immutable lists from the Hamster library:
user> (class (list 1 2 3))
Hamster::Cons
user> (class '(abc def))
Hamster::Cons
user> (cons 'foo (quote (bar baz)))
(foo bar baz)
Similarly, the vector
and vec
functions, as well as the square bracket literal form, create immutable vectors:
user> (vector 1 2 3)
[1 2 3]
user> (vec (list 1 2 3))
[1 2 3]
user> (= [1 2 3] (vector 1 2 3))
true
user> (class [1 2 3])
Hamster::Vector
The hash-map
function or the curly brace literal form can be used to create an immutable map:
user> (map? (hash-map 'a 1 'b 2 'c 3))
true
user> {:a 1 "b" 2 'C 3}
{:a 1, C 3, "b" 2}
A keyword (in Clojure and therefore RubyLisp parlance) begins with a :
. In Ruby, this data type is called, somewhat confusingly, a Symbol.
user> (class :floop)
Symbol
user> (= :snoob (.to_sym "snoob"))
true
RubyLisp monkey-patches the Symbol class to make it behave like a Clojure keyword; you can call it like a function in order to retrieve a value from a hash map:
user> (def barbara {:age 7 :species "greyhound"})
{:age 7, :species "greyhound"}
user> (:species barbara)
"greyhound"
But that's not all -- you can also use keywords to get the value of an instance variable:
;; FIXME: This is a contrived example because it is not yet possible to easily
;; define a class in RubyLisp.
;; rbl.core/=@ is provided as a convenient way to set instance variables on any
;; object... even a string!
user> (def s "my string")
"my string"
user> (=@ s :object_level 9001)
9001
;; instance variables can then be retrieved by using a keyword as a function
user> (:object_level s)
9001
The above example is a little nonsensical (although a testament to the whimsy
of Ruby), but the pair of =@
and keyword-used-as-a-function will be more
useful once there is a convenient way to define classes in RubyLisp.
You can still use Ruby's mutable data structures via inter-op, if you insist:
user> (def a (.dup (.to_a [1 2 3 4 5])))
[1 2 3 4 5]
user> (class a)
Array
user> (.<< a 6)
[1 2 3 4 5 6]
user> a
[1 2 3 4 5 6]
user> (def h (.to_h {}))
{}
user> (class h)
Hash
user> (.merge! h {:a 3})
{:a 3}
user> h
{:a 3}
Run this:
$ gem install rbl
To start a REPL:
$ rbl
To interpret a file containing RubyLisp code:
$ rbl my_sweet_rubylisp_script.rbl
Or, if you'd like, you can include a shebang, make the script executable and run it directly:
$ cat << EOF > reticulate_splines.rbl
#!/usr/bin/env rbl
(print "Reticulating splines... ")
(Kernel::sleep 2)
(println "done.")
EOF
$ chmod +x reticulate_splines.rbl
$ ./reticulate_splines.rbl
Reticulating splines... done.
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Contributions welcome!
As a general rule, I want RubyLisp to mirror the behavior of Clojure as closely as possible. If you have a favorite Clojure function/macro and it isn't included in RubyLisp yet, why not add it yourself and make a Pull Request? :)
Copyright © 2017 Dave Yarwood
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.