It is with superfluous glee that I announce on behalf of the Yapsi
development team the May 2011 release of Yapsi, a Perl 6 compiler
written in Perl 6. Yeah.

You can download it here:

 <http://github.com/downloads/masak/yapsi/yapsi-2011.05.tar.gz>

Yapsi is implemented in Perl 6. It thus requires a Perl 6 implementation to
build and run. This release of Yapsi has been confirmed to work on all
releases of Rakudo Star to date.

Yapsi is an "official and complete" implementation of Perl 6. By general
agreement, no Perl 6 implementation is "the official implementation"...
which is why Yapsi only makes claims to be "AN official implementation".
Similarly, it's only "complete" in a very restricted sense, namely "not
really complete".

This month's release introduces ENTER blocks. So now you can have code
execute at the beginning of your program without having to actually
place it in the beginning of your program.

    $ bin/yapsi -e 'say 2; ENTER { say 1 }; say 3'
    1
    2
    3

The two other big compilers, Rakudo and Niecza, don't have this feature
yet. Pugs does, however.

For a complete list of changes, see doc/ChangeLog.

Yapsi consists of a compiler and a runtime. If this feels in any way
unsettling, then your career probably isn't language implementations.
The compiler generates runnable instructions of a format called SIC.
If *that* feels unsettling, that just means you're relatively normal.
SIC is what the compiler emits and the runtime consumes. Yeah, that's
gross. There's a syntax tree format from which SIC is generated, which
for more or less obscure reasons is called FUTURE. That's unsettling,
too.

As usual, the SIC version is kept in sync with the Yapsi version, and
no SIC version is or has ever been backwards- or forwards-compatible with
any Yapsi version, even when in actual fact, they are. This strict
versioning policy is kept in place just so people won't get any ideas.

The versioning of FUTURE, however, abides by an advanced deprecation
policy which is never really spelled out or elaborated on. This means
that you can never be sure when or how the features you rely upon
from FUTURE will change in the future. And thus, the FUTURE isn't
what it used to be.

An overarching goal for making a Perl 6 compiler-and-runtime is to use it as
a server for various other projects, which hook in at different steps:

* A time-traveling debugger (tardis), which hooks into the runtime.
  Already underway, see <http://github.com/masak/tardis>
* A coverage tool (lid), which will also hook into the runtime.
* A syntax checker (sigmund), which will use output from the parser.

Another overarching goal is to optimize for fun while learning about parsers,
compilers, and runtimes.

Have the appropriate amount of fun! \o/

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