The Boo Programming Language (c) 2009 Rodrigo B. de Oliveira ([email protected])
- .NET 4.5
- Visual C++ Build Tools*
* Boo is built with NAnt, which must be built from sources, which requires NMake, which comes with the Visual C++ Build Tools.
- Mono 4.2.x (4.2.4 is the latest and recommended)
- Bash
You can install compatible versions of the required tools into the build-tools
directory, where the build scripts will execute them from, by running the bootstrap script.
The bootstrap script is a PowerShell script; however, it must be run from a x86 Native Tools Command Prompt:
# FROM A x86 NATIVE TOOLS COMMAND PROMPT
powershell .\build-tools\bootstrap
./build-tools/bootstrap
Building Boo requires Mono 4.2.x, which is not likely to be your "Current" version of Mono. To avoid having to switch your current version every time you want to work on Boo, you can specify the version to use when you run the bootstrap script. The build scripts will then use that version of Mono, regardless of your current version.
./build-tools/bootstrap [<mono version>]
To build the repository, run the nant
script:
# Windows (PowerShell)
.\nant [<target>]
# Mac/Linux
./nant [<target>]
With no target specified, this will build the repository (code and tests) incrementally. To clean and build the repository from scratch, run the "rebuild" target. This will also cause the ast classes and parser to be regenerated (needs a java vm)
To run the unit tests that have already been built with nant
, run the nunit
script:
# Windows (PowerShell)
.\nunit
# Mac/Linux
./nunit
To build and test the entire repository, the same way the CI build does, run the ci
script:
# Windows (PowerShell)
.\ci
# Mac/Linux
./ci
For a brief description of the project and its goals
take a look at docs/BooManifesto.sxw
.
extras/boox
contains a sweet little tool you can use
to get yourself acquainted with the language.
src/
contains all the source code for the runtime and
compiler components.
tests/
contains all the unit tests.
testcases/integration
is a good source of information
on the language features.
lib/
contains project dependencies such as antlr.
bin/
contains the latest version that passed all the tests
and could be successfully used to rebuild the system.
To execute a boo script run:
booi <script> [args]
For instance:
booi examples/hw.boo
You can also have booi to read from stdin by typing:
booi -
You can generate .net assemblies by using booc
(either
the booc.exe
utility or the booc nant
task):
booc -output:build/hello.exe examples/hw.boo
If you want to simply see the transformations applied to your code by the compiler use the boo pipeline, run:
booc -p:boo examples/replace.boo