Ring is a dynamically typed, general-purpose programming language. It can be embedded in C/C++ projects, extended using C/C++ code or used as a standalone language.[5] The supported programming paradigms are imperative, procedural, object-oriented, functional, meta, declarative using nested structures, and natural programming.[6][7] The language is portable (Windows, Linux, macOS, Android,[8] WebAssembly,[9] etc.)[10] and can be used to create console, GUI, web, game and mobile applications.[11][12][13][14]
Paradigm | Multi-paradigm: object-oriented, imperative, functional, procedural, reflective, declarative, natural language programming |
---|---|
Designed by | Mahmoud Samir Fayed[1] |
Developer | The Ring Development Team |
First appeared | January 25, 2016 |
Stable release | 1.21.2[2]
/ 13 September 2024 |
Typing discipline | Dynamic |
Implementation language | C |
OS | Windows, Linux and macOS |
License | MIT License |
Filename extensions | .ring, .rh, .rform |
Website | http://ring-lang.net |
Influenced by | |
Lua, Python, Ruby, C, C#, BASIC, QML, xBase, Supernova | |
Influenced | |
SimpleLang,[3] DragonLang [4] | |
|
History
editIn 2009, Mahmoud Samir Fayed created a minor domain-specific language called Supernova that focuses on User interface (UI) creation and uses some ideas related to Natural Language Programming, then he realized the need for a new language that is general-purpose and can increase the productivity of natural language creation. Ring aims to offer a language focused on helping the developer with building natural interfaces and declarative DSLs.[15][16][17][18]
Goals
editThe general goals behind Ring:[19] [20]
- Applications programming language.
- Productivity and developing high quality solutions that can scale.
- Small and flexible language that can be embedded in C/C++ projects.
- Simple language that can be used in education and introducing Compiler/VM concepts.
- General-Purpose language that can be used for creating domain-specific libraries, frameworks and tools.
- Practical language designed for creating the next version of the Programming Without Coding Technology software.[21]
Examples
editHello World program
editThe same program can be written using different styles. Here is an example of the standard "Hello, World!" program using four different styles.
The first style:
see "Hello, World!"
The second style:
put "Hello, World!"
The third style:
print("Hello, World!")
Another style: similar to xBase languages like Clipper and Visual FoxPro
? "Hello, World!"
Change the keywords and operators
editRing supports changing the language keywords and operators.
This could be done many times in the same source file, and is useful for
- Translating the keywords from English to other human languages (Non-English-based programming languages)
- Customizing the language for use of a favorite style
- Porting Legacy code written in other languages
Translate Ring keywords to Japanese
ChangeRingKeyword See 手紙を出す ChangeRingOperator + そして 改行 = nl します。 = :します。 手紙を出す "こんにちは、世界" そして 改行 します。 ChangeRingKeyword 手紙を出す See // キーワードの復旧 ChangeRingOperator そして + // 演算子の復旧
Translate Ring keywords to Arabic
ChangeRingKeyword See إطبع إطبع "Hello, World!" ChangeRingKeyword إطبع See
Use style similar to the Pascal programming language
ChangeRingKeyword func function
ChangeRingKeyword see write
begin = :begin
function main
begin
write("Hello, World!");
return 0;
end
ChangeRingKeyword function func
ChangeRingKeyword write see
Loop command
editThe Loop command can take an integer to apply the continue semantics to enclosing outer loops[25]
changeRingKeyword loop continue count = 2 for x in 1:5 for y = 1 to 2 if x = 3 ? "About to execute 'loop', count = " + count continue count ok ? "x: " + x + ", y: " + y next next
Object-oriented programming
editRing supports object-oriented programming (classes, objects, composition, inheritance, encapsulation, etc.)[26]
new point { # Create new object from the Point class the access the object using braces x=10 y=20 z=30 # Set the object attributes print() # Call the print() method } # end of object access using braces class point # Define the class x y z # Define the attributes (x,y,z) func print # Define the print() method ? x + nl + y + nl + z # Print the attributes values (nl means printing a new line)
In Ring classes can be defined at runtime using the Eval() function[27]
? "Creating a new class dynamically..." eval("class DynamicClass a b") ? "Printing the instance..." ? new DynamicClass {a=1 b=2}
Implementation
editCompiler and virtual machine
editRing programs are not interpreted directly from the textual Ring file, but are compiled into bytecode, which is then run on the Ring virtual machine. The compilation process is typically invisible to the user and is performed at run-time, but it can be done offline in order to increase loading performance or reduce the memory footprint of the host environment by leaving out the compiler.
The compiler and the virtual machine are designed using visual programming through the Programming Without Coding Technology software then the C code is generated.
Extensions
editThe following are extensions that can be used immediately after the installation of the full installation version (with a file size of about 280 MB for Ring 1.12). Since these are officially provided and maintained on the Ring side, the users are not bothered by library dependencies that may cause problems in other languages, and there is a concern that they can not be used suddenly even if there are destructive language specification changes.
The extensions are implemented in approximately 500,000 lines of C and C++ code.
- RingAllegro (Allegro Game Library)
- RingConsoleColor (Text coloring library for command prompt or the terminal)
- RingCurl (CURL Library)
- RingFreeGLUT (FreeGLUT)
- RingInternet (Internet related library)
- RingLibUV (LibUV-asynchronous I / O library)
- RingMurMurHash (Hash Function Library)
- RingMySQL (MySQL)
- RingODBC (Open Database Connectivity)
- RingOpenGL (OpenGL 1.1-4.6)
- RingOpenSSL (OpenSSL)
- RingPostgreSQL (PostgreSQL)
- RingQt (Qt framework)
- RingRayLib (raylib)
- RingSDL (SDL-Simple DirectMedia Layer Library)
- RingSQLite (SQLite)
- RingWinAPI (Windows API)
- RingWinCREG (Windows Registry)
- RingZIP (zip file processing library)
Libraries
editRing comes with libraries written in Ring itself, such as libraries related to web and game development.
Library Name | Description |
---|---|
Standard Library | General Classes and functions. |
GUI Library | Classes and functions for creating GUI applications |
Objects Library | Classes and functions for creating GUI applications using the MVC design pattern |
Web Library | Simple framework for developing web applications using the MVC design pattern |
Game Engine | Support developing 2D Games for Desktop and Mobile using Declarative Programming based on Allegro and LibSDL |
Natural Library | General-Purpose Natural Language Programming Library. |
Trace Library | A library for debugging applications. |
Type Hints | A library for adding type hints to functions. |
Big Number Library | Support arithmetic operations on huge numbers. |
Fox Ring Library | Contains functions similar to Visual FoxPro. |
ZeroLib Library | Contains classes where the Index starts from 0 instead of 1. |
Applications
editRing is distributed with over 60 applications written in the language.
Some of these applications are
- Analog Clock application
- Calculator application
- The Checkers Game
- The Chess Game
- Fifteen Puzzle 3D Game
- Game 2048
- Knight Tour Game
- Minesweeper Game
- Othello Game
- Sokoban Game
- Sudoku Game
- Tic-tac-toe 3D Game
- Video Music Player application
- Windows Startup Manager application
Tools
editRing is distributed with a Standard IDE that includes the following tools:
- Ring REPL (Read–eval–print loop)
- Ring2EXE (Distributing executable applications)
- RingPM (The Ring Package manager)
- Ring Notepad (Source-code editor)
- Form Designer (WYSIWYG GUI designer)
Ring is also distributed with extensions for many code editors such as Emacs, Notepad++, Geany, Atom, Sublime Text 2, and Visual Studio Code.
Documentation
editRing is distributed with documentation written using Sphinx. A Japanese translation of the documentation is also available.[33]
Reception
editPopularity
editRing had a rapid rise and fall in popularity as measured by the TIOBE Programming Community Index. In February 2018, Ring broke into the top 50 for the first time (position 45).[34] As of October 2020, Ring holds position 93 on the TIOBE index.[35] Ring is listed by GitHub in the list of programming languages that are actively developed.[36]
Criticism
editRing critics pointed to some features in Ring that are not common in widely used programming languages.[37]
- The list index starts from 1 instead of 0 (See: Zero-based numbering)
- Implicit type conversions (See: Implicit type conversions and "type punning")
The list index starts from 1 instead of 0
editIn Ring, the index of the first item in lists and the first character in strings is 1.
cName = "Ring" ? cName[1] # print R aList = ["One","Two","Three"] ? aList[1] # print One
Implicit type conversions
editThe language can automatically convert between numbers and strings.[38]
/* ** Rules: ** <NUMBER> + <STRING> --> <NUMBER> ** <STRING> + <NUMBER> --> <STRING> */ x = 10 # x is a number y = "20" # y is a string nSum = x + y # nSum is a number (y will be converted to a number) cMsg = "Sum = " + nSum # cMsg is a string (nSum will be converted to a string)
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ M. Ayouni (29 July 2020). "A Dialogue with Mahmoud Fayed" (PDF). Springer.
- ^ "Released 1.21.2". 13 September 2024. Retrieved 13 September 2024.
- ^ Azeez Adewale. "The Simple programming language".
- ^ Aavesh Jilani. "The Dragon programming language".
- ^ Dr. Rangarajan Krishnamoorthy (7 August 2021). "First Encounter with the Ring Programming Language". rangakrish.com. Archived from the original on 2021-08-09.
- ^ Omar Selim (January 2018). "The Ring programming language Review" (PDF). BIMArabia Magazine. Archived from the original on 2023-11-17. Retrieved 2024-03-24.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ Ahmed Tartour (January 2020). "Your way to programming (Arabic Book, Pages 56-57) talk about Ring" (PDF). Kotobna.
- ^ Bernhard Lauer (14 August 2018). "Ring: flexible, simple, fast". Dotnetpro.
- ^ Paul Krill (24 August 2020). "Ring language upgrade focuses on WebAssembly". InfoWorld.
- ^ Ghanem, Mohamed (2021). Developing Poet Software using Ring language (PDF). MetaBook (Egypt - Mansoura). ISBN 978-977-6928-38-1.
- ^ Beginning Ring Programming - From Novice to Professional | Mansour Ayouni | Apress.
- ^ Hany Salah (11 January 2016). "Ring: A New programming language". youm7.com. youm7.
- ^ Ahmed Mohammed Hassan. "Ring: A programming language developed by Arab". muslims-res.com. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
- ^ Abedallah Salehani. "A book about the Ring programming language". muslims-res.com. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
- ^ Ring Team (September 2021). "Ring Language - Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)". Ring Team.
- ^ Fayed (April 2010). "Supernova programming language". Code Project.
- ^ Omnia (December 2011). "Supernova language by Egyptian programmer". Youm7.
- ^ Softpedia Team (23 October 2021). "Ring 1.16 review". Softpedia.
- ^ Naveen Verma (14 Aug 2018). "Ring Programming Language: What Do You Need To Know?". Medium.
- ^ Mones Hawas (29 May 2018). "Progress in developing PWCT 2.0 using Ring". youm7.com. youm7.
- ^ Fayed, Mahmoud S.; Al-Qurishi, Muhammad; Alamri, Atif; Hossain, M. Anwar; Al-Daraiseh, Ahmad A. (October 2020). "PWCT: a novel general-purpose visual programming language in support of pervasive application development". CCF Transactions on Pervasive Computing and Interaction. 2 (3): 164–177. doi:10.1007/s42486-020-00038-y. S2CID 225395711.
- ^ Rubin Liu (28 December 2017). "Different styles for writing Hello World program in the Ring programming language". codeproject.com. Code Project.
- ^ Roshan Ali (4 June 2018). "Ring programming tutorial". YouTube.
- ^ "Getting Started - Third Style — Ring 1.19 documentation".
- ^ Dr. Rangarajan Krishnamoorthy (21 August 2021). ""Loop" Command in Ring Programming Language". rangakrish.com. Archived from the original on 2023-03-23.
- ^ "Object Oriented Programming (OOP) — Ring 1.16 documentation".
- ^ Dr. Rangarajan Krishnamoorthy (4 September 2021). "Ring Language: Dynamic Behavior of Classes and Objects". rangakrish.com. Archived from the original on 2023-05-29.
- ^ Majdi Sobain (2 May 2017). "Squares Puzzle using RingAllegro". codeproject.com. Code Project.
- ^ Fayed (11 August 2017). "Using the Natural Language Programming Library (NLPL) in the Ring Programming Language". codeproject.com. Code Project.
- ^ Fayed (12 October 2016). "Natural Language Programming in the Ring Programming Language". codeproject.com. Code Project.
- ^ Open Source Developers (15 June 2019). "Applications written in Ring". Ring Team.
- ^ Etqan Company (25 September 2018). "Gold Magic 800 Game by Etqan Company". Steam (software).
- ^ "ようこそ Ring 取扱説明書へ! — プログラミング言語 Ring 1.16 取扱説明書". Archived from the original on 2021-10-30. Retrieved 2021-10-30.
- ^ "TIOBE Index | TIOBE - the Software Quality Company". www.tiobe.com. Archived from the original on 21 February 2018. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
- ^ Emma White (6 October 2020). "Top 100 Programming Languages". BairesDev. Retrieved 2020-10-06.
- ^ "Build software better, together". GitHub.
- ^ Ciklum (12 December 2017). "New Programming Languages – A Hype Or Reality?". ciklum.com. Ciklum. Archived from the original on 7 December 2017. Retrieved 1 February 2024.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ "Variables — Ring 1.16 documentation".
Further reading
edit- Ghanem (2021) Developing Poet Software using Ring language (Arabic Book), MetaBook (Egypt - Mansoura)
- Ayouni (2020) Beginning Ring Programming, Apress (part of Springer Nature)
- Hassouna (2019) Ring Basics (Arabic Book), Hassouna Academy
- Sobain (2017) RingWinCReg Extension Documentation, SourceForge
- Fayed (2016) The Ring Programming Language, CodeProject