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forked from GitHub/gf-core
hallgren 1f60646f41 More work on translating linearization functions to Haskell
Many Phrasebook languages can now be converted to compilable Haskell code.
Some languages (Fre, Hin, Snd, Urd) generate too much Haskell code to be
practically useful (e.g. 338MB for Fre). One language (Fin) took too long
to convert to Haskell. One language (Pes) has problems with name clashes in
the generated Haskell code.

STILL TODO:

  	- variants
  	- pre { ... }
  	- reduce code duplication for large tables
	- generate qualified names to avoid name clashes
2015-01-06 16:48:03 +00:00
2013-02-22 15:33:52 +00:00
2014-12-30 10:24:57 +00:00
2012-10-26 08:47:00 +00:00
2007-09-12 09:42:08 +00:00
2010-12-21 10:57:54 +00:00
2012-08-06 16:14:47 +00:00

DESCRIPTION

The Grammatical Framework (=GF) is a grammar formalism based on type theory. 
It consists of

    * a special-purpose programming language
    * a compiler of the language
    * a generic grammar processor 

The compiler reads GF grammars from user-provided files, and the 
generic grammar processor performs various tasks with the grammars:

    * generation
    * parsing
    * translation
    * type checking
    * computation
    * paraphrasing
    * random generation
    * syntax editing 

GF particularly addresses four aspects of grammars:

    * multilinguality (parallel grammars for different languages)
    * semantics (semantic conditions of well-formedness, semantic 
      properties of expressions) 
    * grammar engineering (modularity, abstractions, libraries)
    * embeddability in programs written in other languages (C,C++,
      Haskell, Java, JavaScript)


COMPILATION and INSTALLATION of source distribution:
See download/index.html for installation instructions.
(More details can be found in doc/gf-developers.html.)
Description
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Readme Multiple Licenses 138 MiB
Languages
Haskell 45%
C 32.9%
JavaScript 10.1%
HTML 3.3%
Grammatical Framework 2.8%
Other 5.8%