Pinguinux A Deep Look into the Linux Kernel: From the Basics to Infinite Possibilities
Status CERN has switch to a new interpreter, cling. CINT is not supported by CERN anymore; it's now back to its original inventor, Masaharu Goto. Please check here for CINT. The remainder of this page is purely historical. What is CINT? CINT is an interpreter for C and C++ code. It is useful e.g. for situations where rapid development is more important than execution time. Using an interpreter the
What is Cling Cling is an interactive C++ interpreter, built on the top of LLVM and Clang libraries. Its advantages over the standard interpreters are that it has command line prompt and uses just-in-time (JIT) compiler for compilation. Many of the developers (e.g. Mono in their project called CSharpRepl) of such kind of software applications name them interactive compilers. One of Cling’s main go
Interactive GCC Interactive GCC (igcc) is a real-eval-print loop (REPL) for C/C++ programmers. It can be used like this: $ ./igcc g++> int a = 5; g++> a += 2; g++> cout << a << endl; 7 g++> --a; g++> cout << a << endl; 6 g++> It is possible to include header files you need like this: $ ./igcc g++> #include <vector> g++> vector<int> myvec; g++> myvec.push_back( 17 ); g++> printf( "%d\n", myvec.size
Ocaml from the Very Beginning is a book about programming in the OCaml language. Amazon $39.99 or less, or free of charge in PDF or HTML formats, thanks to funding from the OCaml Software Foundation. In OCaml from the Very Beginning John Whitington takes a no-prerequisites approach to teaching a modern general-purpose programming language. Each small, self-contained chapter introduces a new topic
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