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I'm looking for a higher-level system language, if possible, suitable for formal verification, that compiles to standard C, so that it can be run cross-platform with (relatively) low overhead.

The two most promising such languages I've stumbled during the past few days are:

  1. BitC - While the design goals of this language match my needs (it even supports the functional paradigm), it is in very unstable state, the documentation is out of date, and, generally, it seems like a very long shot for a real-world project.

  2. Lisaac - It supports Design-by-contract, which is very cool and has a relatively low performance overhead. However the website is dead, there hasn't been a new release since '08 and generally it seems the language is dead.

I'd also like to note that it's not meant for a real-time system, so a GC or, generally, non-determinism (in the real-time sense), is not an issue.

The project involves mainly audio processing, though it has to be cross-platform.

I assume someone would point me to the obvious answer - "plain ol' C". While it is truly cross-platform and very effective, the code quantity would probably be greater.

EDIT: I should clarify that I mean cross-platform AND cross-architecture. That is why I consider only languages, compiled to C in the first place, but if you can point me to another example, I'd be grateful :)

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    Have you looked at C++? It (is|can be) a high level systems language. Mar 20, 2012 at 2:28
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    Yes, but the complexity introduced by C++ is, I feel, not worth the extra trouble. Plus, every compiler on this earth supports a different part of the language standards, and having, e.g. exceptions, is a mess. Same goes for RTTI and generally every feature that makes C++ higher level.
    – K.Steff
    Mar 20, 2012 at 2:33
  • If you really just don't like C++, you might take a look at D which has a GC among other things and is less complex than C++. It's a lot less popular though and doesn't have as many libraries, but it can interop with C code like C++ can. Neither of those languages actually compile to C though, they compile to machine code. Mar 20, 2012 at 2:37
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    Ok, well I hope you can find what you are looking for. Mar 20, 2012 at 3:02
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2 Answers 2

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I think you may become interested in ATS. It compiles to C (actually it expresses and explains many C idioms and patterns from a formal type-theoretic perspective, it has even been proposed to prepare a book of sorts to show this -- if only we had more time...).

The project involves mainly audio processing, though it has to be cross-platform.

I don't know much about audio processing, I've been mainly doing some computer graphics stuff (mostly the basic things, just to try it out).

Also, I am not sure if ATS works on Windows (never tried that).

(Disclaimer: I've been working with ATS for some time. It is bulky and large language, and sometimes hard to use, but I very much liked the quality of programs I've been able to produce with it, for instance, see TEST subdirectory in GLES2 bindings for some realistic programs)

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  • +1, This is the closest answer yet to what I need, however from a first look it seems the C code generated is required to be compiled only by GCC, which, albeit running on many platforms, is not ubiquitously available.
    – K.Steff
    Mar 20, 2012 at 12:38
  • @K.Steff, if you really need a language that compiles to C that can be compiled by any C compiler, then it's a problem. However, I think you could settle on some specific compilers (say GCC and Clang) that would suit your needs at this point. Then we could work together to make ATS compilable via Clang (I remember that C files did compile with Clang last time I tried, but there were some "missing" headers, so...). If you need some exotic platform/compiler, then please be more specific; maybe we can work it out as well. Mar 21, 2012 at 3:33
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The following doesn't strictly adhere to the requirements but I'd like to mention it anyway and it is too long for a comment:

Pypy's RPython can be translated to C. Here's a nice talk about it. It's been used to implement Smalltalk, JavaScript, Io, Scheme, Gameboy (with various degree of completeness), but you can write standalone programs in it. It is known mainly for its implementation of Python language that runs on Intel x86 (IA-32) and x86_64 platforms.

The translation process requires a capable C compiler. The toolchain provides means to infer various things about the code (used by the translation process itself) that you might repurpose for formal verification.

If you know both Python and C you could use cython that translates Python-like syntax to C. It is used to write CPython extensions.

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  • Thanks, this is something useful, I'll look it up :)
    – K.Steff
    Mar 20, 2012 at 12:27

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