Buchdetails
Beschreibung
The first four chapters provide the foundation for an indepth study of programming languages, including most of the features of Scheme, needed to run the language-processing programs of the book. The next four chapters form the core of the book, deriving a sequence of interpreters ranging from very high- to very low-level. The authors then explore variations in programming language semantics, including various parameter-passing techniques and object-oriented languages, and describe techniques for transforming interpreters that ultimately allow the interpreter to be implemented in any low-level language. They conclude by discussing scanners and parsers and the derivation of a compiler and virtual machine from an interpreter.
Daniel P. Friedman is Professor of Computer Science at Indiana University. Mitchell Wand is Professor in the College of Computer Science at Northeastern University. Christopher T. Haynes is Associate Professor in the Computer Science Department at Indiana University.