CWEB
Paradigm | Literate, imperative (procedural), structured |
---|---|
Designed by | Donald Knuth |
Developer | Donald Knuth & Silvio Levy |
First appeared | 1987 |
Stable release |
3.67
/ October 24, 2006 |
Typing discipline | Static, weak, manifest, nominal |
OS | Cross-platform (multi-platform) |
License | Permissive free software |
Filename extensions | .w |
Website |
www-cs-faculty |
Influenced by | |
WEB, TeX | |
Influenced | |
noweb |
CWEB is a computer programming system created by Donald Knuth and Silvio Levy as a follow-up to Knuth's WEB literate programming system, using the C programming language (and to a lesser extent the C++ and Java programming languages) instead of Pascal.
Like WEB, it consists of two primary programs: CTANGLE, which produces compilable C code from the source texts, and CWEAVE, which produces nicely-formatted printable documentation using TeX.
Features
- Can enter manual TeX code as well as automatic.
- Make formatting of C code for pretty printing.
- Can define sections, and can contain documentation and codes, which can then be included into other sections.
- Write the header code and main C code in one file, and can reuse the same sections, and then it can be tangled into multiple files for compiling.
- Include files.
- Change files, which can be automatically merged into the code when compiling/printing.
- Produces index of identifiers and section names in the printout.
License
% This file is part of CWEB.
% This program by Silvio Levy and Donald E. Knuth
% is based on a program by Knuth.
% It is distributed WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY, express or implied.
% Version 3.64 --- January 2002
% Copyright (C) 1987,1990,1993,2000 Silvio Levy and Donald E. Knuth
% Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this
% document provided that the copyright notice and this permission notice
% are preserved on all copies.
% Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this
% document under the conditions for verbatim copying, provided that the
% entire resulting derived work is given a different name and distributed
% under the terms of a permission notice identical to this one.
See also
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/26/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.