General-purpose programming language and toolchain for maintaining robust, optimal, and reusable software.
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Andrew Kelley 2587474717 stage2: progress towards stage3
* The `@bitCast` workaround is removed in favor of `@ptrCast` properly
   doing element casting for slice element types. This required an
   enhancement both to stage1 and stage2.
 * stage1 incorrectly accepts `.{}` instead of `{}`. stage2 code that
   abused this is fixed.
 * Make some parameters comptime to support functions in switch
   expressions (as opposed to making them function pointers).
 * Avoid relying on local temporaries being mutable.
 * Workarounds for when stage1 and stage2 disagree on function pointer
   types.
 * Workaround recursive formatting bug with a `@panic("TODO")`.
 * Remove unreachable `else` prongs for some inferred error sets.

All in effort towards #89.
2022-04-14 10:12:45 -07:00
.builds ci: update tarballs for LLVM 13 2021-10-01 16:07:42 -07:00
.github move some files to the .github directory 2022-03-24 12:22:23 -07:00
ci CI: update CLI invokation 2022-03-31 16:06:50 -07:00
cmake ci: use zig-bootstrap for windows 2022-02-16 18:43:45 -07:00
deps Do not detect byte-order using _BIG/_LITTLE_ENDIAN 2022-04-12 11:14:33 -07:00
doc Remove primitive values from keyword reference 2022-04-09 12:48:36 +02:00
lib stage2: progress towards stage3 2022-04-14 10:12:45 -07:00
src stage2: progress towards stage3 2022-04-14 10:12:45 -07:00
test stage2: progress towards stage3 2022-04-14 10:12:45 -07:00
tools tools: fix gdb pretty printers 2022-03-20 00:36:44 -07:00
.gitattributes mark tsan as linguist-vendored 2021-06-25 12:46:23 +03:00
.gitignore std/build: change default install prefix to zig-out 2021-04-29 23:58:45 +02:00
build.zig test harness improvements 2022-03-31 15:10:31 -07:00
CMakeLists.txt compiler_rt: Implement floatXiYf/fixXfYi, incl f80 2022-04-12 10:25:26 -07:00
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ZIG

A general-purpose programming language and toolchain for maintaining robust, optimal, and reusable software.

Resources

Installation

License

The ultimate goal of the Zig project is to serve users. As a first-order effect, this means users of the compiler, helping programmers to write better software. Even more important, however, are the end-users.

Zig is intended to be used to help end-users accomplish their goals. Zig should be used to empower end-users, never to exploit them financially, or to limit their freedom to interact with hardware or software in any way.

However, such problems are best solved with social norms, not with software licenses. Any attempt to complicate the software license of Zig would risk compromising the value Zig provides.

Therefore, Zig is available under the MIT (Expat) License, and comes with a humble request: use it to make software better serve the needs of end-users.

This project redistributes code from other projects, some of which have other licenses besides MIT. Such licenses are generally similar to the MIT license for practical purposes. See the subdirectories and files inside lib/ for more details.