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A dialect of Lisp that designed for Minecraft Bedrock Command System.

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Command Lisp

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Command Lisp is a simplified language designed for Minecraft Bedrock Command System, characterized by a very high level of abstraction, which is also a dialect of Lisp.

What sets Lisp apart is its design to be self-evolving. In Lisp, you can define new Lisp operators. When new abstract concepts become popular (such as object-oriented programming), we always find that these new concepts are easiest to implement in Lisp.

Lisp is like the DNA of languages, a language that will never become obsolete.

Paul Graham

Command Lisp Compiler (clc)

This repository is mainly the compiler of language Command Lisp (clc). Clc is actively developing now but it still requires a lot of effort to accomplish the compiler.

Set up environment

CL uses dune as the project manager like most ocaml projects. The project provides a quick environment for nix. The following command will automatically set up the developing environment (Linux):

nix-shell shell.nix

Or without nix:

sudo apt install ocaml opam
opam install core yojson

Build Project

dune build

Run CLC

dune exec clc

Why Command Lisp (CL)?

In Minecraft Bedrock, editing commands can sometimes be very challenging, and the unstable game code has caused us a lot of trouble. Moreover, many commands are not very intuitive, significantly reducing work efficiency. The birth of CL is aimed at addressing these pain points, and using it, you can experience the following benefits:

  • Write once, run in multiple places: You only need to use CL to complete command writing, and you can use our tools to import multiple saves, achieving reusability.
  • High abstraction, high efficiency: CL language allows you to achieve more possibilities with less code.
  • Simple and easy to learn: Lisp language is very intuitive and easy to understand.
  • Reduce errors: Compared to finding errors directly in the command system, finding errors in CL scripts is obviously simpler.

Why Ocaml

This project tried many languages ​​during the development process, and finally chose Ocaml. Click here to see the detail

Basic Syntax

The name "Command Lisp" is taken from "Common Lisp" and "Command", which indicates that the syntax of CL is similar to Common Lisp: Syntax is made up of S-expressions. An S-expression is either an atom or a list.

  • Atoms can be integers (int32) like 114 and 514 or symbols like cl, + and etc.

  • There’s also a special kind of symbol called keywords, which are colon-prefixed symbols like :abc or :keyword. Keywords evaluate to themselves (something like enums)

  • Lists are made up with atoms

  • All the expressions will be evaluates to a value.

Comments

The comments in CL are very simple.

; Single line comments start with a semicolon

#|
  Multi-line comment.
  #|
    Can be nested.
  |#
|#

Hello World

(tellraw :all "Hello World")
  • This expression call a built-in function named tellraw with parameters :all and "Hello World"
  • This command will print a message Hello World in screen
  • The return value of this function will be always 0

Function

Function can be defined simply by def.

(def fib (n)
  (if (< n 2)
      n
      (+ (fib (- n 1))
         (fib (- n 2)))))

(def name [param1 param2 param2 ...] (body) (expr))

(def square (n) (* n n))

Function call (application):

(fib 10) ; 89

Local variables

Local variables are normal lexically scoped variables (with let operator)

(let ((x 10)) (square x)) ; 100
(let ((x 11) (y 4)) (+ x y)) ; 15
(let ((x 10) (y (+ x 2))) (+ x y)) ; 22

IO

CL provides the following functions for print:

  • tellraw <target> <string>
  • titleraw <target> <string>
  • printf <target> <raw_string> <int list>
  • titlef <target> <raw_string> <int list>
  • See the operation of scoreboards.

Control Flow

Condition if

(if (condition) (then) (else))
(if (> 4 3) 3 4) ; 3
(if (tag? :random "TEST")
    (write "Found player marked for TEST")
    (write "No player has the TEST tag"))
  • The condition will be compiled to a execute command and the result (where 0 for false and 1 for true) will be pushed to the top of the data stack.
  • The write is similar to tellraw but the first argument was set to :all.

Available predicates:

  • >: greater than
  • <: less than
  • >=: greater than or equal
  • <=: less than or equal
  • =: equal
  • /=: not equal
  • tag?: has tag

For multi-case:

(cond (((cond1) (then1)) ((cond2) (then2))))

Command

Some essential command was included in CL core library but not all covered.

Inline Command (all these expression return 0 in default)

(inline command) ; single
(seq [command1 command2 command3]) ; sequences

Macro System

The Macro System is a powerful and distinctive feature that sets Lisp apart from many other programming languages. Macros in Lisp allow developers to define new language constructs and extend the language itself (meta-programming).

In Common Lisp, you can use more built-in function and data type which will be evaluated at compiling time.

Target Selector

Target selector variables:

  • :all: All players
  • :entity: All entities
  • :nearest: Nearest player
  • :random: Random player
  • :self: The executor itself

Or just use raw string:

(tellraw "caimeo" "Hello World")
(tellraw "@e[r=10]" "Radius 10")

Scoreboard

  • Read a value from scoreboard objectives
(read :nearest "obj") 
; Read objective obj from nearest player. 
; This can be used for local variable definition.
  • Set a value to scoreboard objectives
(set :all "obj" 1) ; set obj to 1
  • Read and save a value
(let ((x (read :all "obj1"))) (set :all "obj2" x)) ; equiv to
(save :all "obj1" :all "obj2") ; save obj1 to obj2
  • Swap the values
(swap :all "obj1" :all "obj2") ; swap obj1 and obj2

Tag

(tag+ :nearest TAG_1)
(tag- :random TAG_2)
(if (tag? :nearest TAG_3)
    (tellraw :all "wow"))

Async

Asynchronous programming is a programming paradigm that deals with the execution of operations that may run concurrently or independently, without the need for explicit synchronization.

Asynchronous programming is particularly relevant in scenarios where certain operations, such as I/O operations may take a significant amount of time to complete, and waiting for them to finish in a synchronous manner would result in inefficiency and wasted resources.

In Minecraft world we may need something like waiting a pig reach a particular area, which is a async event. CL provides a feature called await (Wait until done) for this situation.

(await (tag? :all "done")
       (tellraw :all "All done"))
  • The code stops until all players are tagged with done.
  • After that the tellraw expression will be executed.
(await (/= 0 (read :nearest "value"))
       (let (v (read :nearest "value"))
       (printf :all "fib of ~d is ~d" v (fib v))))
  • Read a value from nearest player's objective value (can't be 0)
  • Assign the score of value to variable v
  • Calculate the v-th fibonacci number and print to screen

Teleport

(tp :random :random)
(tp :all :nearest)

Design

The design document of Command Lisp can be found here

License

GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE Version 3