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Build Your Own Programming Language

You're reading from   Build Your Own Programming Language A programmer's guide to designing compilers, interpreters, and DSLs for modern computing problems

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804618028
Length 556 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Clinton  L. Jeffery Clinton L. Jeffery
Author Profile Icon Clinton L. Jeffery
Clinton L. Jeffery
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Table of Contents (27) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section I: Programming Language Frontends
2. Why Build Another Programming Language? FREE CHAPTER 3. Programming Language Design 4. Scanning Source Code 5. Parsing 6. Syntax Trees 7. Section II: Syntax Tree Traversals
8. Symbol Tables 9. Checking Base Types 10. Checking Types on Arrays, Method Calls, and Structure Accesses 11. Intermediate Code Generation 12. Syntax Coloring in an IDE 13. Section III: Code Generation and Runtime Systems
14. Preprocessors and Transpilers 15. Bytecode Interpreters 16. Generating Bytecode 17. Native Code Generation 18. Implementing Operators and Built-In Functions 19. Domain Control Structures 20. Garbage Collection 21. Final Thoughts 22. Section IV: Appendix
23. Answers
24. Other Books You May Enjoy
25. Index
Appendix: Unicon Essentials

Marking live data and sweeping the rest

This section gives an overview of the Unicon garbage collector, which is a mark-and-sweep style of garbage collector that was developed for the Icon language and then extended. It is written in (an extended dialect of) C, like the rest of the Icon and Unicon runtime system. Since Unicon inherited this garbage collector from Icon, much of what you see here is due to the many folks who implemented that language. All I did to it was add its “multiple regions” support, which seemed like a good idea at the time of 64KB heap limits on 640KB MS-DOS computers. Other aspects of this garbage collector are described in the book The Implementation of Icon and Unicon: a Compendium.

In almost all garbage collectors other than reference counting, the approach to collection is to find all the live pointers that are reachable from all the variables in the program; everything else in the heap is garbage. In a mark-and-sweep collector, live data...

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