Build Your Own Forth Interpreter
80 points by AlexeyBrin 5 days ago | 25 comments
SAI_Peregrinus 22 hours ago
I like building little throwaway FORTH interpreters as an exercise when learning a new language. They tend to touch just enough common programming needs to be interesting: read user input and/or a file, parse the input, run a state machine with two stacks, write output.
replyspc476 2 days ago
I've already done that---ANS Forth for the 6809 (https://github.com/spc476/ANS-Forth).
replyfjfaase 10 hours ago
In the past years, I developed a forth like language as an intermediate language for a C compiler. For debuging purposes, I also implemented a memory safe interpreter, besides a compiler that generates assembly output.
replySee my profile for link to my github repositories and look under MES-replacement for stack_c
WalterGR 7 hours ago
Here’s a link to the right directory at least: https://github.com/FransFaase/MES-replacement/tree/main/src
replyalexthehurst 7 hours ago
I’ve been working on a homemade CPU (in simulator) and I’m in the middle of implementing an ISA and assembler as a bug step up from working in machine code to working in assembly. I’ve been looking at Forth as a good option for a next-level-up language which is relatively easy to implement and easy to script with.
replyntavish 18 hours ago
I wrote one some time ago, and it took me a lot longer than I thought it should. (it's core is finished, but dictionary is limited) https://ntavish.in/projects/emforth/
replystevekemp 16 hours ago
You might also enjoy this tutorial, which started out being based upon a hacker news thread:
replyI go through stages to implement minimal language.
ithkuil 2 days ago
"if you know one forth, you know one forth"
replyjs8 2 days ago
So implement four of them, and you will know them all! First Forth with indirect threaded code, second Forth with direct threaded code, third Forth with subroutine threaded code, and the final fourth with token threaded code.
replyromforth 24 hours ago
You jest, but I did end up doing just that in my implementation (https://github.com/romforth/romforth) trying to shoehorn a Forth implementation into a MSP430 device with just 2KB ROM + 128 byte RAM
replyAlexeyBrin 2 days ago
I doubt you will want to code professionally in Forth unless you work on embedded, so the dialect you learn doesn't matter too much. But it is interesting to implement a small interpreter and play with it.
replyiberator 2 days ago
This is a strange article imo.
replyI was expecting to see FORTH in bare metal C or ASM.
There is a common myth about newbie programmers that FORTH is write-only and that you need to type everything in one line, without comments or function calls etc.
Writing forth is super easy especially if you have a stack machine at your disposal. For example when you are building your own virtual cpu/architecture with assembler and compiler.
It's more trivial than to understand any JavaScript framework lol
Research FORTH more guys - it doesn't need to be strange and hard :)
ps. Lisp SUCKS
/rant
volemo 2 days ago
I was with you 'till the last line. :P
replyiberator 2 days ago
IMO Lisp is harder to implement than Forth, and LESS readable, butt MAYBE i fell into the same trap as others with Forth. hahaha
replyNetMageSCW 23 hours ago
actually I think Lisp is easier to implement than Forth, buth is it really Forth if the internals aren’t discussed? (E.g. Word secondary, threaded code, etc)
reply
I had been looking for an excuse to learn Forth, and its use in classic computing meant that it had a shot of being workable on the NES.
I was initially using IceForth but I had trouble getting that working, and so I got Codex to generate something that works, but then I also that building your own Forth is sort of a rite of passage for a software engineer, so I have been building my own Forth from scratch.
My custom hack-job isn't ready yet, but I was extremely impressed at the performance I was able to get on the NES with compiled Forth from the Codex thing on the NES. I'm getting roughly 80% of the speed for equivalent programs written in assembly, with much less code and this is without advanced optimizations. I do plan on finishing my custom one because I think I can build what I want a bit better than Codex, and I'm optimistic I can get the performance reasonable.
Forth is such a fascinating language, because it sort of enables you to work at any level of the program. You can write it super high level, almost like Lisp, but you can also poke around and create mappings to assembly, and you can do all this with decent performance no less! It has quickly become one of my more favorite scripting languages, though that might be because I have always had a soft spot for RPN.