Merge pull request #1169 from ian-bertolacci/master

Merged fix from upstream, added slight corrections
This commit is contained in:
Levi Bostian 2015-07-19 18:07:09 -05:00
commit a7f82aa29f

View File

@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ contributors:
- ["Ian J. Bertolacci", "http://www.cs.colostate.edu/~ibertola/"]
---
You can read all about chapel at [Cray's official Chapel website](http://chapel.cray.com).
You can read all about Chapel at [Cray's official Chapel website](http://chapel.cray.com).
In short, Chapel is an open-source, high-productivity, parallel-programming language in development at Cray Inc., and is designed to run on multi-core PCs as well as multi-kilocore supercomputers.
More information and support can be found at the bottom of this document.
@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ writeln( "There are ", 3, " commas (\",\") in this line of code" );
stdout.writeln( "This goes to standard output (just like plain writeln( ) does)");
stderr.writeln( "This goes to standard error" );
// Variables dont have to be explicitly typed as long as
// Variables don't have to be explicitly typed as long as
// the compiler can figure out the type that it will hold.
var myVar = 10; // 10 is an int, so myVar is implicitly an int
myVar = -10;
@ -117,7 +117,7 @@ a = thisInt ^ thatInt; // Bitwise exclusive-or
a += thisInt; // Addition-equals ( a = a + thisInt;)
a *= thatInt; // Times-equals ( a = a * thatInt; )
b &&= thatBool; // Logical-and-equals ( b = b && thatBool; )
a <<= 3; // LEft-bit-shift-equals ( a = a << 10; )
a <<= 3; // Left-bit-shift-equals ( a = a << 10; )
// and many, many more.
// Unlike other C family languages there are no
// pre/post-increment/decrement operators like
@ -190,7 +190,7 @@ if ( a % 3 == 0 ) {
var maximum = if ( thisInt < thatInt ) then thatInt else thisInt;
// Select statements are much like switch statements in other languages
// However, Select statements dont cascade like in C or Java
// However, Select statements don't cascade like in C or Java
var inputOption = "anOption";
select( inputOption ){
when "anOption" do writeln( "Chose 'anOption'" );
@ -201,8 +201,6 @@ select( inputOption ){
otherwise {
writeln( "Any other Input" );
writeln( "the otherwise case doesn't need a do if the body is one line" );
writeln( "Oh, and when statements dont cascade like the case statements" );
writeln( "of other languages" );
}
}
@ -246,7 +244,7 @@ for x in 1..10 {
// define an index set that can be iterated over.
// Ranges are single dimensional
// Domains can be multi-dimensional and can
// represent indicies of different types as well.
// represent indices of different types as well.
// They are first-class citizen types, and can be assigned into variables
var range1to10: range = 1..10; // 1, 2, 3, ..., 10
var range2to11 = 2..11; // 2, 3, 4, ..., 11
@ -452,7 +450,7 @@ writeln( myChangingArray );
// We can query the type of arguments to generic procedures
// Here we define a procedure that takes two arguments of
// the same type, yet we dont define what that type is.
// the same type, yet we don't define what that type is.
proc genericProc( arg1 : ?valueType, arg2 : valueType ): void {
select( valueType ){
when int do writeln( arg1, " and ", arg2, " are ints" );
@ -542,7 +540,7 @@ class MyClass {
var memberInt : int;
var memberBool : bool = true;
// Classes have default constructors that dont need to be coded (see below)
// Classes have default constructors that don't need to be coded (see below)
// Our explicitly defined constructor
proc MyClass( val : real ){
this.memberInt = ceil( val ): int;
@ -620,10 +618,10 @@ class GenericClass {
}
// Copy constructor
// Note: We still have to put the the type as an argument, but we can
// Note: We still have to put the type as an argument, but we can
// default to the type of the other object using the query (?) operator
// Further, we can take advantage of this to allow our copy constructor
// to copy classes of different types
// to copy classes of different types and cast on the fly
proc GenericClass( other : GenericClass(?otherType),
type classType = otherType ) {
this.classDomain = other.classDomain;
@ -773,7 +771,7 @@ Occasionally check back here and on the [Chapel site](http://chapel.cray.com) to
### What this tutorial is lacking:
* Modules and standard modules
* Synchronize and atomic variables
* Synchronize variables and atomic operations
* Multiple Locales (distributed memory system)
* ```proc main(){ ... }```
* Records
@ -805,7 +803,7 @@ and its as easy as
3. ```make```
4. ```source util/setchplenv.bash # or .sh or .csh or .fish```
You will need to ```source util/setchplenv.EXT``` from the chapel directory every time your terminal starts so its suggested that you drop that command in a script that will get executed on startup (like .bashrc).
You will need to `source util/setchplenv.EXT` from within the Chapel directory (`$CHPL_HOME`) every time your terminal starts so its suggested that you drop that command in a script that will get executed on startup (like .bashrc).
Chapel is easily installed with Brew for OS X