Qore | |
Paradigm: | multi-paradigm thread safe/parallel/shared memory, functional, imperative, object-oriented (class-based), procedural, functional |
Designer: | David Nichols |
Developer: | David Nichols |
Latest Release Version: | 1.16.1 |
Turing-Complete: | Yes |
Typing: | Dynamic, Optionally Strong |
Influenced By: | Perl, D, C++, Java |
Programming Language: | C++, Pthreads |
Operating System: | Cross-platform |
License: | MIT License, GNU General Public License, GNU Lesser General Public License |
File Ext: | .q , .qm , .qtest |
Qore is an interpreted, high-level, general-purpose, garbage collected dynamic programming language, featuring support for code embedding and sandboxing with optional strong typing and a focus on fundamental support for multithreading and SMP scalability.
Qore is unique because it is an interpreted scripting language with fundamental support for multithreading (meaning more than one part of the same code can run at the same time), and additionally because it features automatic memory management (meaning programmers do not have to allocate and free memory explicitly) while also supporting the RAII idiom with destructors for scope-based resource management and exception-safe programming.[1] This is due to Qore's unique prompt collection implementation for garbage collection.
Qore scripts typically have the following extensions:
.q
: for Qore scripts.qm
: for Qore user modules.qtest
: for Qore test scriptsExecutable Qore scripts on Unix-like operating systems will typically start with a hashbang to specify the filename of the interpreter as follows:
<nowiki>#</nowiki>!/usr/bin/env qore
Qore syntax is similar to and inspired from the following programming languages:[2]
%new-style
, Qore's syntax is highly similar to Perl; the foreach
statement, splice
, push
, pop
, chomp
operators, Perl5-compatible regular expressions, and more%new-style
, Qore code looks more similar to Java;[3] the synchronized
keyword, the instanceof
operator, object and class implementationon_exit
, on_success
, and on_error
statements provide exception-aware functionality similar to D's scope(exit)
, scope(failure)
, allowing exception-aware cleanup code to be placed next to the code requiring cleanupmap
, foldl
, foldr
, and select
operators with lazy evaluation of functional and list operators and statementsBasic types include: boolean
, string
, integer
, float
, date
, binary
,[4] list
, hash
(associative arrays), and object
,[5] as well as code code
for code used as a data type.[6]
Complex types are also supported such as hash<string, bool>
, list<string>
, reference<list<string>>
as well as type-safe hashes.
Despite being an interpreted language, Qore was designed to support multithreading as a fundamental design principle. All elements of Qore are thread-safe, and the language in general has been designed with SMP scalability in mind. Because all elements of the language were designed to support multithreading, Qore programs and scripts do not have to limit themselves to a subset of Qore's functionality, which is also why there is no Global interpreter lock in Qore.[7] Threading functionality in Qore is provided by the operating system's POSIX threads library.
Qore features a unique garbage collection approach called prompt collection that allows destructors to be run immediately when objects go out of scope, even if they have recursive references back to themselves. This allows for Qore to support the RAII idiom and also perform garbage collected automatic memory management.
Qore was designed to support embedding and sandboxing logic in applications; this also applies to applications written in Qore as well as applications using the Qore library's public C++ API. By using the Program
class which represents a logic container with sandboxing controls, discrete objects can be created and destroyed at runtime containing embedded code to extend or modify the behavior of your application in user-defined ways.[8]
Qore's standard runtime library supports data mapping, APIs for communicating with databases (including high-level APIs for SQL operations, schema management, and DBA actions), client APIs and server infrastructure implementations for many protocols including HTTP, REST (with REST schema validation/code generation including Swagger support), client/server SOAP support (including code and message generation), WebSocket, RPC protocols, generic connector APIs, generic data mapping APIs, and many file format and file- and data-exchange protocols and more.[9]
Qore supports testing through the QUnit module which facilitates automated testing and Continuous integration processes for code written in Qore.
Qore's Git (software) repository is hosted on GitHub. Binary packages are available as RPM s, in MacPorts and in FreeBSD Ports as well as for other operating systems, including Microsoft Windows; see General Source and Download Info on the Qore wiki for more information.