LiveScript (programming language)
Paradigm | multi-paradigm, functional, object-oriented |
---|---|
Designed by | Jeremy Ashkenas, Satoshi Murakami, George Zahariev |
Developer | Jeremy Ashkenas, Satoshi Murakami, George Zahariev |
First appeared | 2011 |
Stable release | LiveScript 1.4.0
/ 11 May 2015[1] |
Typing discipline | dynamic, weak |
OS | Cross-platform |
License | MIT |
Filename extensions | .ls |
Website | livescript |
Influenced by | |
JavaScript, Haskell, CoffeeScript, F# |
LiveScript is a functional language that compiles to JavaScript. It was created by Jeremy Ashkenas—the creator of CoffeeScript—along with Satoshi Muramaki, George Zahariev, and many others.[2] Notably, LiveScript was briefly the name of JavaScript in 1990s.[3]
Syntax
LiveScript is an indirect descendant of and is partly compatible with Coffeescript.[4] The following is a fully Coffeescript-compatible hello-world example of LiveScript syntax.
hello = ->
console.log 'hello, world!'
While calling a function can be done with empty parens, hello()
, LiveScript treats the exclamation mark as a single-character shorthand for function calls with zero arguments: hello!
LiveScript introduces a number of other incompatible idioms:
Name mangling
At compile time, the LiveScript parser implicitly converts kebab case (dashed variables and function names) to camelcase.
hello-world = ->
console.log 'Hello, World!'
With this definition, both the following calls are valid. However, calling using the same dashed syntax is recommended.
hello-world!
helloWorld!
This does not preclude developers from using camelcase explicitly or using snakecase. Dashed naming is however, common in idiomatic LiveScript[5]
Pipes
Like a number of other functional programming languages such as F# and Elixir, LiveScript supports the pipe operator, |>
which passes the result of the expression on the left of the operator as the first argument to the expression on the right of it.
"hello!" |> capitalize |> console.log
# > Hello!
Operators as functions
When parenthesized, operators such as not
or +
can be included in pipelines or called as if they were functions.
111 |> (+) 222
# > 333
(+) 1 2
# > 3
References
- ^ "LiveScript website". Retrieved 20 June 2015.
- ^ "LiveScript contributors page". Retrieved 20 June 2015.
- ^ "W3 Web Education Community Group". Retrieved 20 June 2015.
- ^ http://livescript.net/
- ^ http://www.preludels.com/
External links