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Preferred Languages : C/C++, Java, and Ruby

I am looking for some helpful books/tutorials on how to write your own compiler simply for educational purposes. I am most familiar with C/C++, Java, and Ruby so I prefer resources that involve one of those three, but any good resource is acceptable.

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Hi

I am looking into the same concept, and found this promising article by Joel Pobar,

Create a Language Compiler for the .NET Framework

he discusses a high level concept of a compiler and proceeds to invent his own langauge for the .Net framework. Although its aimed at the .Net Framework, many of the concepts should be able to be reproduced. The Article covers:

  1. Langauge definition
  2. Scanner
  3. Parser (the bit im mainly interested in)
  4. Targeting the .Net Framework The
  5. Code Generator

there are other topics, but you get the just.

Its aimed to people starting out, written in C# (not quite Java)

HTH

bones

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I have written an online tutorial on compiler design, titled "Let's build a scripting Engine-Compiler, as well as a native code compiler called Bxbasm. The Online doc's are at: http://geocities.com/blunt_axe_basic/tutor/Bxb-Tutor.doc

The docs, support files and compiler, in zip form, are at: http://geocities.com/blunt_axe_basic

Also: http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/QDepartment

Steve A.

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if you like me, who has no formal computer science education, and interested on build/want to know how a compiler works.

I am recommend "Programming Language Processors in Java: Compilers and Interpreters", an amazing book for self taught computer programmer.

from my points of view, understanding those basic language theory, automate machine, set theory is not a big problem, the problem is how to turn those thing into code, above book tell you how to write a parser, analysis context, and generate code. if you can not understands this book, then i have to say, give up build a compiler. the book is best programming book i have even read.

there is an other book also good, Compiler Design in C, lot of code, tell you every thing about how to build compiler and lex tools.

building a compiler is a fun programming practice, can learn a heaps of programming skills.

do not buy the Dragon book, wast of money and time,not for practitioner

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Sorry it is in spanish, but this is the bibliography of a course called "Compiladores e Intérpretes" (Compilers and Interpreters) in Argentina.

The course was from formal language theory to compiler construction, and that's are the topics you need to build, at least, a simple compiler.

  • Compilers Design in C.
    Allen I. Holub

    Prentice-Hall. 1990.

  • Compiladores. Teoría y Construcción.
    Sanchís Llorca, F.J. , Galán Pascual, C. Editorial Paraninfo. 1988.

  • Compiler Construction.
    Niklaus Wirth

    Addison-Wesley. 1996.

  • Lenguajes, Gramáticas y Autómatas. Un enfoque práctico.
    Pedro Isasi Viñuela, Paloma Martínez Fernández, Daniel Borrajo Millán. Addison-Wesley Iberoamericana (España). 1997.

  • The art of compiler design. Theory and practice.
    Thomas Pittman, James Peters.

    Prentice-Hall. 1992.

  • Object-Oriented Compiler Construction.
    Jim Holmes.
    Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, N.J. 1995

  • Compiladores. Conceptos Fundamentales.
    B. Teufel, S. Schmidt, T. Teufel.

    Addison-Wesley Iberoamericana. 1995.

  • Introduction to Automata Theory, Languages, and Computation.

    John E. Hopcroft. Jeffref D. Ullman.
    Addison-Wesley. 1979.

  • Introduction to formal languages.
    György E. Révész.

    Mc Graw Hill. 1983.

  • Parsing Techniques. A Practical Guide.
    Dick Grune, Ceriel Jacobs.
    Impreso por los autores. 1995
    http://www.cs.vu.nl/~dick/PTAPG.html

  • Yacc: Yet Another Compiler-Compiler.
    Stephen C. Johnson
    Computing Science Technical Report Nº 32, 1975. Bell Laboratories. Murray Hill, New
    Jersey.

  • Lex: A Lexical Analyzer Generator.
    M. E. Lesk, E. Schmidt. Computing Science Technical Report Nº 39, 1975. Bell Laboratories. Murray Hill, New Jersey.

  • lex & yacc.
    John R. Levine, Tony Mason, Doug Brown.
    O’Reilly & Associates. 1995.

  • Elements of the theory of computation.
    Harry R. Lewis, Christos H. Papadimitriou. Segunda Edición. Prentice Hall. 1998.

  • Un Algoritmo Eficiente para la Construcción del Grafo de Dependencia de Control.
    Salvador V. Cavadini.
    Trabajo Final de Grado para obtener el Título de Ingeniero en Computación.
    Facultad de Matemática Aplicada. U.C.S.E. 2001.

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A PDF version of Crenshaw's tutorial (see first post, maybe it can be added there): http://www.stack.nl/~marcov/compiler.pdf

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In order to get a deeper understanding of parsing I recommend to read Parsing Techniques - A Practical Guide and a good book on theoretical computer science.

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Not a book, but a technical paper and an enormously fun learning experience if you want to know more about compilers (and metacompilers)... this website walks you through building a completely self-contained compiler system that can compile itself and other languages:

http://www.bayfronttechnologies.com/mc%5Ftutorial.html

This is all based on an amazing little 10-page technical paper:

Val Schorre META II: A Syntax-Oriented Compiler Writing Language

from honest-to-god 1964. I learned how to build compilers from this back in 1970. There's a mind-blowing moment when you finally grok how the compiler can regenerate itself....

I know the website author from my college days, but have nothing to do with the website.

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ANLTR isn't in here? Wow! Don't forget the book.

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