# MOROS Lisp A minimalist Lisp interpreter is available in MOROS to extend the capabilities of the Shell. MOROS Lisp is a Lisp-1 dialect inspired by Scheme, Clojure, and Ruby! ## Overview ### Types - Basics: `bool`, `list`, `symbol`, `string` - Number: `float`, `int`, `bigint` ### Literals - Number: `2.5`, `-25`, `255`, `0xFF`, `0xDEAD_C0DE`, `0b101010` - String: `"Hello, World!"` - Escape: `\b`, `\e`, `\n`, `\r`, `\t`, `\"`, `\\` ### Built-in Operators - `quote` (abbreviated with `'`) - `quasiquote` (abbreviated with `` ` ``) - `unquote` (abbreviated with `,`) - `unquote-splice` (abbreviated with `,@`) - `splice` (abbreviated with `@`) - `atom?` - `equal?` (aliased to `eq?`) - `head` - `tail` - `cons` - `if` - `cond` - `while` - `variable` (aliased to `var`) - `function` (aliased to `fun`) - `macro` (aliased to `mac`) - `set` - `define` (aliased to `def` and equivalent to `define-function`) - `define-function` (aliased to `def-fun`) - `define-macro` (aliased to `def-mac`) - `apply` - `do` - `doc` - `eval` - `expand` - `load` ### Primitive Operators - `type`, `number/type` (aliased to `num/type`), `parse` - `string` (aliased to `str`) - `string->number` and `number->string` (aliased to `str->num` and `num->str`) - `string->binary` and `binary->string` (aliased to `str->bin` and `bin->str`) - `number->binary` and `binary->number` (aliased to `num->bin` and `bin->num`) - `regex/find` - `shell` (aliased to `sh`) - Arithmetic operations: `+`, `-`, `*`, `/`, `^`, `rem` (aliased to `%`), `trunc` - Trigonometric functions: `acos`, `asin`, `atan`, `cos`, `sin`, `tan` - Comparisons: `>`, `<`, `>=`, `<=`, `=` - Enumerable: `length` (aliased to `len`), `put`, `get`, `slice`, `contains?` - String: `string/trim` and `string/split` (aliased to `str/trim` and `str/split`) - List: `list`, `concat`, `chunks`, `sort`, `unique` (aliased to `uniq`) - Dict: `dict` - File: `file/exists?`, `file/size`, `file/open`, `file/close`, `file/read`, `file/write` - Net: `host`, `socket/connect`, `socket/listen`, `socket/accept` ### Core Library - `nil`, `nil?`, `list?`, `empty?` - `boolean?` (aliased to `bool?`), `string?` (aliased to `str?`), `symbol?` (aliased to `sym?`), `number?` (aliased to `num?`) - `function?` (aliased to `fun?`), `macro?` (aliased to `mac?`) - `abs`, `mod`, `min`, `max` - `first`, `second`, `third`, `last`, `rest`, `push` - `map`, `reduce`, `reverse` (aliased to `rev`), `range`, `filter`, `reject`, `intersection` - `not`, `and`, `or` - `let` - `string/join` (aliased to `str/join`), `lines`, `words`, `chars` - `regex/match?` ### File Library - `read`, `write`, `append` - `read-binary`, `write-binary`, `append-binary` - `read-line`, `read-char` - `uptime`, `realtime` - `p`, `print` ### Math Library - `floor`, `ceil`, `round` ### Compatibility Library - `atom`, `eq`, `label`, `lambda`, `progn`, `begin` - `car`, `cdr`, `caar`, `cadr`, `cdar`, `cddr` ## Usage The interpreter can be invoked from the shell: ``` > lisp MOROS Lisp v0.7.0 > (+ 1 2 3) 6 > (quit) ``` And it can execute a file. For example a file located in `/tmp/lisp/fibonacci.lsp` with the following content: ```lisp (load "/lib/lisp/core.lsp") (def (fibonacci n) (if (< n 2) n (+ (fibonacci (- n 1)) (fibonacci (- n 2))))) (print (if (nil? args) "Usage: fibonacci " (fibonacci (str->num (head args))))) ``` Would produce the following output: ``` > lisp /tmp/lisp/fibonacci.lsp 20 6755 ``` ## Examples ```lisp (load "/lib/lisp/core.lsp") (print "Hello, World!") (var foo 42) # Variable definition (set foo (+ 40 2)) # Variable assignement (var double (fun (x) (* x 2))) # Function definition (def (double x) (* x 2)) # Shortcut (double foo) # => 84 (def-mac (++ x) # Macro definition `(set ,x (+ ,x 1))) (var i 0) (while (< i 10) (++ i)) (= i 10) # => true (def (map f ls) "Apply function to list" (if (nil? ls) nil (cons (f (first ls)) (map f (rest ls))))) (doc map) # => "Apply function to list" (var bar (quote (1 2 3))) (var bar '(1 2 3)) # Shortcut (map double bar) # => (2 4 6) (map (fun (x) (+ x 1)) '(4 5 6)) # => (5 6 7) (var name "Alice") (str "Hello, " name) # => "Hello, Alice" (^ 2 64) # => 18446744073709551616 ``` ## Changelog ### Unreleased ### 0.7.1 (2024-06-20) - Add `floor`, `ceil`, and `round` functions ### 0.7.0 (2023-12-22) - Add binary and hexadecimal number literals - Test for truthiness (neither `false` nor `nil`) in conditions of `if` and `while` - Rename `nth` to `get` - Add `empty?`, `reject`, `put`, `push`, and `host` functions` - Add `dict` type - Use `/` instead of `.` as namespace separator - Add `number->string` (aliased to `num->str`) with an optional radix argument ### 0.6.0 (2023-09-23) - Add file, number, string, and regex namespaces - Add socket functions ### 0.5.0 (2023-06-21) - Rename or add aliases to many functions - Add full support for line and inline comments - Add params to function representations - Add docstring to functions ### 0.4.0 (2022-08-25) - Rewrite a lot of the code - Add integer and big integer support - Add tail call optimization (TCO) - Add macro support ### 0.3.2 (2022-07-02) - Add new functions ### 0.3.1 (2022-06-06) - Rewrite parts of the code - Add new functions and examples ### 0.3.0 (2022-12-12) - Rewrite the evaluation code - Add new functions - Add a core library ### 0.2.0 (2021-12-04) The whole implementation was refactored and the parser was rewritten to use [Nom](https://github.com/Geal/nom). This allowed the addition of strings to the language and reading from the filesystem. ### 0.1.0 (2021-07-21) MOROS Lisp started from [Risp](https://github.com/stopachka/risp) and was extended to include the seven primitive operators and the two special forms of John McCarthy's paper "Recursive Functions of Symbolic Expressions and Their Computation by Machine" (1960) and "The Roots of Lisp" (2002) by Paul Graham.