Hy
Hy is a dialect of the Lisp programming language designed to interact with Python by translating s-expressions into Python's abstract syntax tree (AST). Hy was introduced at Python Conference (PyCon) 2013 by Paul Tagliamonte. Lisp allows operating on code as data (metaprogramming), thus Hy can be used to write domain-specific languages.
Hy logo - Cuddles the cuttlefish | |
Paradigm | Multi-paradigm: procedural, functional, object-oriented, meta, reflective, generic |
---|---|
Family | Lisp |
Designed by | Paul Tagliamonte |
Developers | Core team |
First appeared | 2013 |
Stable release | |
Preview release | 1.0a4
/ 16 March 2022 |
Scope | lexical, optionally dynamic |
Platform | IA-32, x86-64 |
OS | Cross-platform |
License | MIT-style |
Filename extensions | .hy |
Website | hylang |
Influenced by | |
Kawa, Clojure, Common Lisp |
Similar to Kawa's and Clojure's mappings onto the Java virtual machine (JVM), Hy is meant to operate as a transparent Lisp front-end for Python. It allows Python libraries, including the standard library, to be imported and accessed alongside Hy code with a compiling step where both languages are converted into Python's AST.
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