hetu_script 0.0.2+2 hetu_script: ^0.0.2+2 copied to clipboard
Hetu is a lightweight script language written in Dart,intended to be embedded in Dart programs.
Hetu Script #
Introduction #
Hetu is a lightweight script interpreter written in Dart, intended to be embedded in Dart programs.
It is kind of like lua but free of ffi c bindings and make it easy to debug.
In your Dart code, you can interpret an script file by this:
import 'package:hetu_script/hetu.dart';
void main() async {
// init the Hetu Environment
var hetu = await HetuEnv.init();
hetu.evalf('hello.ht', invokeFunc: 'main');
}
While 'hello.ht' is the script file written in Hetu, here is an example:
// Define a class.
class Person {
// Define a member function.
proc greeting(name: String) {
// Print to console.
print('hello ', name)
}
}
// This is where the script starts executing.
proc main {
// Declare and initialize variables.
let number = (6 * 7).toString()
let jimmy = Person()
jimmy.greeting(number);
}
Hetu's grammar is almost same to typescript, except a few things:
- Function is declared with 'fun' or 'proc', the latter means procedure and doesn't return value.
- Variable declared with keyword 'let' without a type will be given a type if it has an initialization.
Binding #
To call Dart functions in Hetu, just init Hetu with 'externalFunctions'.
Then define those dart funtion in Hetu with 'external' keyword.
Then you can call those functions in Hetu.
void main() {
var hetu = await Hetu.init(externalFunctions: {
'dartHello': (HT_Instance instance, List<dynamic> args) {
print('hello from dart');
if (args.isNotEmpty) for (final arg in args) print(arg);
},
});
hetu.eval(
'external fun dartHello\n'
'proc main {\n'
'dartHello("from hetu")\n'
'\n}',
invokeFunc: 'main');
}
Command line tool #
On Windows, there is a hetu.exe under project directory to use in Command line.
Usage:
hetu [file_name] [invoke_func]
If no option is provided, enter REPL mode.
In REPL mode, everything you entered will be evaluated and print out immediately.
>>>var a = 42
42
If you want to write multiple line in REPL mode, use '\' to end a line.
>>>fun hello {\
return 6 * 7} // press enter
function hello(): any // repl print
>>>hello()
42 // repl print
>>>
If [file_name] is provided, evaluate the file in function mode.
If [invoke_name] is provided, evaluate the file in library mode and call a certain function with given name.