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Building Programming Language Interpreters

Building Programming Language Interpreters

By : Daniel Ruoso
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Building Programming Language Interpreters

Building Programming Language Interpreters

By: Daniel Ruoso

Overview of this book

Designing a custom programming language can be the most effective way to solve certain types of problems—especially when precision, safety, or domain-specific expressiveness matters. This book guides you through the full process of designing and implementing your own programming language and interpreter, from language design to execution, using modern C++. You’ll start by exploring when and why building a domain-specific language is worth it, and how to design one to fit a specific problem domain. Along the way, you’ll examine real-world interpreter architectures and see how their design decisions affect language behavior, capabilities, and runtime trade-offs. The book then walks through the entire process of interpreter implementation: defining syntax, building a lexer and parser, designing an abstract syntax tree, generating executable instructions, and implementing a runtime. All examples are in modern C++, with a focus on clean architecture and real-world usability. By the end, you’ll have a fully working interpreter for a domain-specific language designed to handle network protocols—plus the knowledge and tools to design your own programming language from scratch. *Email sign-up and proof of purchase required
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
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1
Modeling the Programming Language Runtime Environment
7
Modeling the Programming Language Syntax
12
Implementing the Interpreter Runtime
16
Interpreting Source Code
24
Index

Instructions, Concurrency, Inputs, and Outputs

In this chapter, we will look at how different programming languages approach how the instructions are executed. We will also work through the decision-making process for our custom programming language.

We will discuss the following aspects:

  • What makes an instruction the fundamental abstraction building block of a programming language
  • The difference between using operator stacks versus registers to process computation
  • The distinction between the language stack versus the interpreter stack
  • How interruptions to the control flow need to be taken into consideration in the design of an interpreter, both in the native language and in the interpreted language
  • How the execution of native code is a different form of interruption for interpreted languages
  • How different languages handle concurrent execution and how that impacts the interpreter design
  • How to take all these aspects and guide the...
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Tech Concepts
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Programming languages
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Building Programming Language Interpreters
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