Boo (programming language)
Boo is an object-oriented, statically typed, general-purpose programming language that seeks to make use of the Common Language Infrastructure's support for Unicode, internationalization, and web applications, while using a Python-inspired syntax[2] and a special focus on language and compiler extensibility. Some features of note include type inference, generators, multimethods, optional duck typing, macros, true closures, currying, and first-class functions.
Paradigm | Object oriented |
---|---|
Designed by | Rodrigo B. De Oliveira |
Developer | Rodrigo B. De Oliveira |
First appeared | 2003 |
Stable release | 0.9.7
/ 25 March 2013 |
Typing discipline | static, strong, inferred, duck |
Implementation language | C# |
Platform | Common Language Infrastructure (.NET Framework & Mono)/ |
License | BSD 3-Clause[1] |
Website | github |
Influenced by | |
C#, Python | |
Influenced | |
Genie, Vala |
Boo was one of the three scripting languages for the Unity game engine (Unity Technologies employed De Oliveira), until it was dropped in 2014 due to the small userbase.[3] Despite official support for Boo ending, the language could still be used in Unity, until the Boo compiler was removed from the engine in 2017. [4]
Boo is free software released under the BSD 3-Clause license. It is compatible with the Microsoft .NET and Mono frameworks.
Code samples
Hello world program
print "Hello World!"
Fibonacci series generator function
def fib():
a, b = 0L, 1L # The 'L's make the numbers double word length (typically 64 bits)
while true:
yield b
a, b = b, a + b
# Print the first 5 numbers in the series:
for index as int, element in zip(range(5), fib()):
print("${index+1}: ${element}")
See also
- Fantom
- Apache Groovy
- IronPython
- IronRuby
- Nemerle
- REBOL
References
- "license.txt". github.com. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
- Rodrigo Barreto de Oliveira (2005). "The boo Programming Language" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on February 6, 2009. Retrieved February 22, 2009.
- aleksandr (September 3, 2014). "Documentation, Unity scripting languages and you". Unity Blogs.
- Richard Fine (August 11, 2017). "UnityScript's long ride off into the sunset". Unity Blogs.
External links
- Official website
- The sources of Boo hosted on GitHub
- The documentation of Boo hosted on GitHub
- Visual Boo, for Visual Studio 2010
- BooLangStudio VSIP for Visual Studio 2008
- #develop free IDE for C#, VB.NET and Boo projects on Microsoft's .NET platform
- Boo syntax highlighting for Visual Studio 2010
- How To Think Like a Computer Scientist: Learning to Program with Boo
- Boo Succinctly Revealed
- Bootorial