Alee Forth relies on the C++20 standard. It *does not* rely on any operating system. As a result, portability extends down to microcontroller targets with <1kBofmemory.Seethe`msp430`folderforanexampleofsuchaport.
System-specific functionality is obtained through a `sys` Forth word. This word calls a user-supplied C++ function that implements whatever functionality is needed.
Alee implements the entire "core" and majority of the "core extension" [word-sets](https://forth-standard.org/standard/core). Implementation is tracked in `compat.txt` with missing words listed below. Fundamental words are hard-coded into Alee while the rest of the implementation is found in `forth/core.fth` and `forth/core-ext.fth`. Running Alee without these implementation files will leave you with a very minimal word-set. These files may be compiled into the Alee binary by building the `standalone` target.
Alee aims for compliance with common Forth standards like Forth 2012 and ANS Forth. Compliance is tested using a [Forth 2012 test suite](https://github.com/gerryjackson/forth2012-test-suite). Supported test files are in the `test` directory with tests for unimplemented words commented out.
Alee requires `make` and a compiler that supports C++20. Simply running `make` will produce the `libalee.a` library and a REPL binary named `alee`. You will likely want to pass in the core implementation files by calling `./alee forth/core.fth forth/core-ext.fth`.
*`msp430-prep` and `msp430`: Builds a binary for the [MSP430G2553](https://www.ti.com/product/MSP430G2553) microcontroller. See the `msp430` folder for more information.