Difference between revisions of "Introduction"

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= Liberty's future =
 
= Liberty's future =
To get a glimpse of Liberty's future, please take a look at the plans for [[ECMA|EMCA features]] and the [https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?group=liberty-eiffel | issue tracker].
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To get a glimpse of Liberty's future, please take a look at the plans for [[ECMA|EMCA features]] and our [https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?group=liberty-eiffel issue tracker].
   
 
== Release names ==
 
== Release names ==

Revision as of 22:05, 11 September 2014

Liberty Eiffel is a compiler for the Eiffel programming language

It continues the development of SmartEiffel, the former GNU Eiffel Compiler.

It is a complete, small and fast, Eiffel compiler, including an Eiffel to C compiler, documentation tools, a pretty printer, a debugger and various other tools.

It also includes a large library of classes distributed under the terms of the MIT/X Consortium License and a comprehensive set of wrappers/bindings for widespread Free-Software libraries.

Eiffel is an advanced object-oriented programming language that emphasizes the design and construction of high-quality and reusable software.

If you are impatient go directly to Getting Started otherwise, read a few words about history:

Liberty's roots

Origins

Liberty has its origin in the Statue of Liberty. The structure of the Statue was designed and built by Gustave Eiffel, a famous French engineer.

The origins of the language is Eiffel and more specifically SmartEiffel. One can consider LibertyEiffel a fork of SmartEiffel.

Manifesto

We want to retain from SmartEiffel its rigour; but not its rigidity. Think of Liberty as SmartEiffel down from its ivory tower.

Liberty is free as in freedom. We want people to contribute to Liberty from the start.

So please, do join us to give Eiffel the leading position it should have won twenty years ago :-)

Foundation documents

Those documents were published by the SmartEiffel team:

Liberty's future

To get a glimpse of Liberty's future, please take a look at the plans for EMCA features and our issue tracker.

Release names

See list of released versions and Upcoming releases.

Community

You may join us via our mailing list by simply e-mailing to libertyeiffel@librelist.com or browse the list archives. Or choose any other way to Get in touch with the LibertyEiffel team.

Origins of the SmartEiffel project

During the course of his work on his thesis, Dominique Colnet, principal author of SmartEiffel, discovered the Eiffel language while editing an encyclopedic work on object oriented languages ([MNCLT 1989], [MNCLT 1991]).

Holding the post of Assistant Professor of Computer Science in 1989, the Powers That Be at his educational institution at the time decided, in 1990, to use the Eiffel language for introductory computer science. It is amusing to mention here that Dominique Colnet was at the time a fervent defender of Smalltalk. As everyone knows, it's a pretty good thing that it's not up to a young Assistant Professor of Computer Science to decide which programming language is the best to use. So, it is amusing to note that Dominique Colnet was forced to use Eiffel against his will in 1990!

In order to reconcile his teaching and research work on the compilation of object oriented languages, Dominique Colnet decided therefore to abandon Smalltalk for Eiffel and to establish a project to kill two birds with one stone: combine interesting research with a free product that would also be useful for teaching.

The SmartEiffel project, originally named SmallEiffel actually commenced during the year 1994 when Dominique Colnet decided to write his own Eiffel compiler.

Writing an Eiffel compiler is no small undertaking. Before making this decision, Dominique Colnet had begun to write a new Eiffel class library whose architecture simply corresponded nearly word for word with the base classes one could find at that time in Smalltalk-80 libraries ([GR 1983], [Goldberg 1984]). Because of the very bad quality of the commercial Eiffel compilers available at that time the decision was taken to write a new one from scratch. The new compiler was named SmallEiffel to make reference to both Smalltalk and Eiffel ([OOSC 1988], [ETL 1992]). An entire year was necessary to write the first version of SmallEiffel and it was not until July 1995 that SmallEiffel was able to compile itself. Since that time, more than ten years have passed and more than thirty versions have seen the light of day.

Little SmartEiffel developing into something big?

Starting out as simple research prototype and teaching aid, SmartEiffel has seen its capabilities steadily increase from version to version since 1995.

In 1998, on the occasion of a visit to LORIA by Richard Stallman, president and founder of the FSF (Free Software Foundation), the GNU designation was added to the project's name.

From 2002 and up to 2005, Dominique Colnet participated actively in meetings with the initial objective of standardizing the Eiffel language (ECMA standards committee TC39-TG4, ECMA standard number 367). Of course it goes without saying that the entire SmartEiffel team is associated with the standards work and its many long discussions...

Finally, in May 2005, the SmartEiffel project announced that it was going to continue to work on the true Eiffel language. In reality, the language described by the ECMA TC39-TG4 working group clearly diverges from what is conventionally called Eiffel. ECMA-Eiffel is a very different language, and above all, not yet experimented. The SmartEiffel team will never implement ECMA TC39-TG4.

Note: In this respect the LibertyEiffel team is not as strict as the original SmartEiffel developers. 
See ECMA about Liberties attitude to ECMA.

At July 2005, at the time when we write these lines, after more than 10 years of work not only on the compiler but also on the Eiffel language itself, we, the SmartEiffel project, consider that the Eiffel language as we know it today, now contains nearly all desirable features. Therefore, version 2.2 of SmartEiffel marks the debut of a new level of stability and corresponds to what we think of as being the true Eiffel language.