# Alee Forth Alee is a concise Forth implementation written in modern C++ that aims for portability, minimal program size, and execution efficiency. ## Cross-platform compatibility Alee relies on the C++17 standard. Alee *does not* rely on operating-system-specific functions, making portability easy. The goal of portability extends down to microcontroller targets with kilobytes of memory. See the `msp430` target for an example of a port. System-specific functionality is obtained through a `sys` Forth word. This word calls a user-supplied C++ function that implements the necessary (or any additional) functionality. # Forth compatibility Alee implements a large majority of the "core" and "core extension" [glossaries](https://forth-standard.org/standard/core). Implementation is tracked in `compat.txt`, with missing words listed below. Fundamental words are built into Alee (written in C++); the rest of the implementation is in `core.fth`. This means Alee should be executed as `alee core.fth` to include these words. Alternatively, the `standalone` target packages the `core.fth` dictionary into the program. **Missing** core features: * Pictured numeric output conversion `<# #>` * Words for unsigned integers: `U. U< UM* UM/MOD` * `>NUMBER` * `FIND` **Missing** core extensions: ``` .R HOLDS PAD PARSE PARSE-NAME REFILL RESTORE-INPUT S\" SAVE-INPUT SOURCE-ID U.R U> UNUSED WITHIN [COMPILE] ``` 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. ## Building Alee requires `make` and a C++17-compatible compiler. To compile, simply run the `make` command. This will produce a library, `libalee.a`, as well as a REPL binary named `alee`. A `small` target exists that optimizes the build for size. A `fast` target exists that optimizes for maximum performance on the host system. The `standalone` target will produce a `alee-standalone` binary that contains and pre-loads the core dictionary. The `msp430` target builds Alee for the [MSP430G2553](https://www.ti.com/product/MSP430G2553) microcontroller. Like `standalone`, the core dictionary is built into the binary. Configurable constants and types are defined either in the Makefile or in `types.hpp`.