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* [https://github.com/rubinius/rubinius Rubinius code repository]
* [https://github.com/rubinius/rubinius Rubinius code repository]
* [http://antoniocangiano.com/2008/12/09/the-great-ruby-shootout-december-2008/ The Great Ruby Shootout (December 2008)]: Rubinius compared to other common Ruby VMs
* [http://antoniocangiano.com/2008/12/09/the-great-ruby-shootout-december-2008/ The Great Ruby Shootout (December 2008)]: Rubinius compared to other common Ruby VMs
* [http://isitrubinius.com/ Is It Rubinius?] - Community-powered gem compatibility for Rubinius
* [http://sam.aaron.name/2007/9/22/rubinius-on-os-x/ How to install Rubinius on Mac OS X]{{deadlink|date=February 2012}}
* [http://isitrubinius.com/ Is It Rubinius?] - Community-powered gem compatibility for Rubinius{{deadlink|date=February 2012}}


{{Ruby programming language}}
{{Ruby programming language}}

Revision as of 05:05, 29 July 2012

Rubinius
Developer(s)Evan Phoenix, Brian Ford, Dirkjan Bussink
Stable release
1.2.4 / July 5, 2011 (2011-07-05)
Repository
Written inC++ and Ruby
Operating systemCross-platform
TypeRuby programming language interpreter
LicenseBSD license
Websitehttp://rubini.us/

Rubinius is an alternative Ruby programming language implementation created by Evan Phoenix. Based loosely on the Smalltalk-80 Blue Book design,[1] Rubinius seeks to "provide a rich, high-performance environment for running Ruby code."[2]

Goals

Rubinius follows in the Lisp[3] and Smalltalk traditions, by natively implementing as much of Ruby as possible in Ruby code.[4]

It also has a goal of being thread-safe in order to be able to embed more than one interpreter in a single application.

Sponsorship

Engine Yard funds one full-time engineer to work exclusively on Rubinius.

See also

References

  1. ^ Smalltalk-80: The Language and its Implementation (PDF). ISBN 0-201-11371-6.
  2. ^ "Rubinius README". Rubinius Project. Retrieved 2009-02-22.
  3. ^ Gabriel, Dick. "Episode 84: Dick Gabriel on Lisp". Retrieved 2011-05-20. 'Well, you know if I took that piece of code and hand compiled it, then that could be an interpreter for Lisp.' So he did that and it surprised John McCarthy and overnight they had a running implementation of Lisp.
  4. ^ Nutter, Charles (2008-04-27). "Promise and Peril for Alternative Ruby Impls". Retrieved 2009-02-22. Evan Phoenix's Rubinius project is an effort to implement Ruby using as much Ruby code as possible.

External links