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  Search Home : Computers : Programming : Languages : Lisp : Scheme : Implementations
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Aleph@ Guile


See Also:


  • 3DScheme: Two systems for Windows with built in "industrial-strength" solid modeler based on the ACIS solid modeler Geometric Modeling Kernel.
  • Better Scheme: Language designed and largely implemented, now a matter of coding, documenting. Goals: high consistency; improve language's functional nature; consistency with lambda calculus; optimize, but not at cost of other goals.
  • Bigloo: System with one goal: enable Scheme-based programming style where C(++) is usually needed; makes Scheme practical via features found in most traditional languages but not Scheme and functional programming. [Open Source, GPL]
  • CMU AI Repository Free/Shareware Scheme Implementations: Yet more Scheme implementations from the CMU AI Repository. Many of these are also available from the Indiana University Scheme Repository.
  • Chez Scheme: A Scheme implementation. [Commercial]
  • Chicken: A Scheme compiler which compiles a subset of R5RS into C. Uses the ideas presented in Baker's paper "Cheney on the MTA". It is highly portable, reasonably efficient and makes interfacing to C and C++ very easy.
  • DrScheme: Full Scheme programming environment for Macintosh, many Unixes, Windows. Has module and object systems, platform-independent graphics. Ideal for beginners; one of the major design goals is a flexible teaching environment.
  • EdScheme: Interpreter for Macintosh or Windows. Has "friendly and convenient interactive programming environment" with language sensitive editor, full documentation. [commercial, free 14 day download]
  • Elk (Extension Language kit): (old site, last update in 1997) An embeddable, reusable extension language subsystem for applications written in C or C++. Elk is also a useful standalone Scheme implementation with interfaces to POSIX, Unix, and X11.
  • Elk Scheme - the Extension Language Kit: (new site) An embeddable, reusable extension language subsystem for applications written in C or C++. Elk is also a useful standalone Scheme implementation with interfaces to POSIX, Unix, and X11.
  • Galapagos: An interactive multithreaded Scheme interpreter with turtle graphics for Windows 95, based on SCM.
  • Gambit: Scheme system for DOS, Macintosh, Unix, Windows 32-bit, by Marc Feeley. Developed at University of Montreal. [Free to academic research, education]
  • Gauche: An R5RS Scheme implementation developed to be a handy script interpreter. Quick startup, built-in system interface, native multilingual support. [Open source, BSD license]
  • Hotdog: A nearly R5RS compliant Scheme compiler with multiple backends, currently including .NET, JVM, and C. [Public Domain]
  • Indiana University Scheme Repository: Implementations: Even more Scheme implementations freely available from the Indiana U. repository.
  • Infer Project: Statically-typed Scheme dialect, written in Infer, combines many of the best features of Scheme and ML. NSF funded.
  • Inlab Scheme: A commercial Scheme which is freely available for non-commercial use on Linux and FreeBSD. It has support for several features like bitmap/greymap processing and can be used as a general tool for image processing, OCR or specialized optical object and pattern recognition.
  • KSM-Scheme: A R5RS Scheme interpreter which integrates with C, allowing calling of C functions and accessing C variables from Scheme. It provides a mechanism to load C shared libraries. It runs on x86 and PowerPC based Linux systems.
  • Kali Scheme: A distributed implementation of Scheme that permits efficient transmission of higher-order objects such as closures and continuations.
  • Larceny: A simple and efficient run-time system for Scheme, currently running on the SPARC architecture. A portable implementation that generates C (dubbed "Petit Larceny") is also being developed.
  • LispMe: Fred Bayers home page is really the home of this Scheme for 3COM Pilot PDA systems: compiler and runtime system intended mainly as a tool to quickly try ideas and algorithms, but can write dialog-based applications.
  • LispMe: Newer versions here. Scheme system for the Palm Pilot PDA developed by Fred Bayer.
  • MIT Scheme: From MIT, for many systems, has comprehensive code library, includes most functionality of ANSI Standard Common Lisp (CLtL2), many low-level OS interactions. Distributed with system is LIAR (LIAR Imitates Apply Recursively), optimizing compiler that outputs native machine code, has Edwin interactive Emacs-derived editor written in pure Scheme and the subject of an MIT AI Lab Memo. Arguably one of the best Scheme systems available, unarguably one of largest. Major downfall: its not totally R5RS compliant, more so for hygienic macros and #f versus the empty list. Version 7.5 now available for x86 systems.
  • MzScheme: Small, embeddable, scripting PLT Scheme implementation: R5RS compliant, full numerical tower, threads (all platforms), exceptions, modules, class-based objects, regular-expression matching, TCP/IP. For Macintosh, Unix, Windows 32-bit.
  • Open Scheme: From Erian Concept, has CLOS-like object system; runs on Be/x86, FreeBSD, Linux/x86, Solaris (SPARC, x86), Windows. [commercial, unlimited free download evaluation copy with registration]
  • PC Scheme: Texas Instruments system for DOS OS; no longer maintained; download formats: source, executable/binary.
  • PLT Scheme: Advocacy and authoring group, umbrella name for family of implementations: DrScheme (Scheme, MzScheme, MrEd); books: How to Design Programs, How to Use Scheme; and TeachScheme! project. University-based, supported by many volunteers writing code, documentation.
  • Petite Chez Scheme: A complete Scheme system that is fully compatible with Chez Scheme but uses high-speed threaded interpreter technology in place of Chez Scheme's incremental native-code compiler. [Freeware]
  • Pocket Scheme: For MIPS, SH3, ARM-based Windows CE devices. Supports Aubrey Jaffer's SLIB, has initialization file for same, parenthesis-balancing text editor. Windows NT version exists. [Open Source, Artistic License]
  • Pseudoscheme: Embeds Scheme in Common Lisp.
  • QScheme: A fast, small Scheme interpreter which is mostly compliant with the R5RS standard.
  • RScheme: Portable, extended Scheme with reflective object(-oriented) system, operating system services, modules, threads, many system programming features (integrates with, compiles to C or bytecodes) and useful extensions. [Open Source]
  • SCM: A portable Scheme implementation written by Aubrey Jaffer.
  • SIOD: Scheme in One Defun/Day: Very small, portable implementation, has some database, Unix programming, CGI scripting extensions. Runs on DOS, Linux, Unix, Windows. Free source downloads.
  • STk: A free R4RS Scheme interpreter which can access the Tk graphical package.
  • STklos: Derived from STkn implementation based on an ad-hoc virtual machine, byte compiler; compilable as library to embed in other programs, has object system with MOP, multiple inheritance, generic functions, multimethods, module system, full R5RS tower of numbers, link to GTK+ X toolkit; almost R5RS compliant (in process), to support as many final SRFIs as possible, now supports SRFI-6.
  • SXM, CXEMA: Portable Scheme implementation, conforms to IEEE/ANSI standard, supports all features of R5RS Report, many features of Chez Scheme and various SRFIs. Derived from XScheme: object system dropped, many changes, additions.
  • Scheme 48: A small and portable implementation based on a bytecode interpreter designed to be used as a testbed for experiments in implementation techniques.
  • Scheme 48 manual pages: HTMLified by Margaret Fleck, one of the authors of Envision.
  • Scheme Implementations and Mailing Lists: A list of Scheme implementations from the Scheme FAQ maintained by Mark Kantrowitz.
  • Scheme->C: DEC's venerable Scheme to C translator which runs on most anything with an ANSI C compiler.
  • Schoca (Scheme for OCaml): An implementation of the Scheme language in OCaml. The primary purpose of Schoca is the use as an embedded extension language in OCaml applications. [Open source, GPL]
  • Scsh: A broad-spectrum systems-programming environment for Unix embedded in R5RS Scheme (actually within version 0.53 of Scheme48). Support for concurrent system programming, sophisticated I/O and automatic garbage collection for process resources.
  • Scsh FAQ: The FAQ for Scsh, the Scheme Shell.
  • Sizzle: A Scheme interpreter implemented as a library which can be embedded into C programs, as well as a standalone interpreter. Mostly R5RS, Guile compatible, and includes regular expressions and most Posix functions.
  • Stalin: A powerful optimizing Scheme compiler from Jeffery Mark Siskind at the NEC Research Institute. Sacrifices functions such as call/cc in favor of efficiency, but generated code is remarkably bulletproof and fast.
  • T: Scheme-like language developed at Yale; is to Scheme rather as NIL is to Lisp; mainly of interest to historians and theoreticians. FTP for v3.1.
  • The Ksi Scheme Interpreter: Ksi is a portable, embeddable Scheme implementation written in C. Unfortunately its documentation is all in Russian at this point.
  • TinyScheme: A tiny implementation of Scheme based on MiniSCHEME. It provides almost complete coverage of R5RS Scheme. Geared towards embedded scripting use, but also functions as a standalone interpreter and extensible shell tool. Recent changes have gotten the executable size down to approximately 64KB on Linux/x86.
  • VSCM: A portable Scheme implementation written by Matthias Blume of Princeton University. No longer actively developed.
  • Vx-scheme: A compact (<64 Kb) implementation of R4RS Scheme that compiles for VxWorks/Tornado (and is integrated with the system symbol table). [Open source, Artistic License]
  • WinScm: Scheme environment for Windows 3.1/95; interpreter independent, though defaults to Jaffer's SCM. Used at University of Lille 1, France, for introductory programming course. Free downloads. English, Française.
  • XLISP: A superset of the Scheme dialect of Lisp with extensions to support object-oriented programming.
  • narsi: A portable scheme interpreter by Britt Park. Also other free software, including: Cdoc - a simple program to generate pretty TeX output from annotated c or c++ code; Userblock - a simple user space block device driver kit for Linux; UVFS - a user space filesystem kit.

 
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