HyperTalk | |
Influenced: | ActionScript, AppleScript, ECMAScript, JavaScript, Lingo, LiveCode, SenseTalk, SuperTalk |
HyperTalk is a discontinued high-level, procedural programming language created in 1987 by Dan Winkler and used in conjunction with Apple Computer's HyperCard hypermedia program by Bill Atkinson. Because the main target audience of HyperTalk was beginning programmers, HyperTalk programmers were usually called "authors" and the process of writing programs was known as "scripting". HyperTalk scripts resembled written English and used a logical structure similar to that of the Pascal programming language.
HyperTalk supported the basic control structures of procedural languages: repeat for/while/until, if/then/else, as well as function and message "handler" calls (a function handler was a subroutine and a message handler a procedure). Data types usually did not need to be specified by the programmer; conversion happened transparently in the background between strings and numbers. There were no classes or data structures in the traditional sense; in their place were special string literals, or "lists" of "items" delimited by commas (in later versions the "itemDelimiter" property allowed choosing an arbitrary character). Code execution typically began as a response to an event such as a mouse click on a UI widget.
In the late 1980s, Apple considered using HyperCard's HyperTalk scripting language as the standard language across the company and within its classic Mac OS operating system, as well as for interprocess communication between Apple and non-Apple products. The company did not oppose the development of imitations like SuperCard, but it created the HyperTalk Standards Committee to avoid incompatibility between language variants.[1] The case-insensitive language was initially interpreted, but gained just-in-time compilation with HyperCard 2.0.[2]
For most basic operations including mathematical computations, HyperTalk favored natural-language ordering of predicates over the ordering used in mathematical notation. For example, in HyperTalk's put
assignment command, the variable was placed at the end of the statement:
The HyperTalk code has the side-effect of creating the variable theResult on the fly. Scripts could assign any type or value to a variable using the put
command, making HyperTalk very weakly typed. Conversions between variable types were invisible and automatic: the string "3" could be multiplied by the number 5 to produce the number 15, or the number 5 concatenated onto the string "3" to produce the string "35". HyperTalk would not complain unless the types could not be automatically converted.
The language's flow control and logic were generally similar to other common languages, using an if ... then ... else ... end if
structure for conditionals and supporting loops based on a flexible repeat ... end repeat
syntax. Comments were prefaced with two minus signs: -- this is a comment
.
HyperCard's primary user interface concept was the card, a display system that emulated an index card. Cards were normally used to store information, similar to a record in a conventional flat-file database. The graphical layout of the card was created using the mouse by placing various elements on the card, such as text fields and buttons. A master layout "card" known as the background was shown behind the transparent areas of each card. Objects placed on the background, such as fields and buttons, would be shared as a common layout among several cards, but with card-specific content. The collection of cards, backgrounds and the associated data stored in them were stored in a single file known as the stack (of cards). Collectively, all of these data-containing objects are referred to as containers.
HyperTalk functions, or scripts, were normally stored within the script
property available in many of the stack's containers. Scripts could access the properties of a container, corresponding to instance variables, using the get
and set
instructions. The script property held plain text and had no special properties; scripts could be placed in, and run from, any text container, including string variables, or imported from other stacks using the start using
command. A script could even be user-provided text typed into an on-screen text field. Arbitrary text could be executed using the do
command, in a manner similar to Dynamic SQL.[3]
A key concept in HyperTalk was the way it referred to containers through a navigational system based on the visual hierarchy of the stack. Every container in the stack was given a unique ID number when created and could also be given an optional name. Scripts could refer to objects by using either of these identifiers, along with an object type specified using the of
operator. This operator used a natural language syntax making for easily readable, self-documenting code. For instance, a script stored in a button on a card might wish to take user-supplied text gathered using a text field and store the text in a variable called theValue:
Objects within a given context—the card or background, for instance—were also given a runtime number based on their z-order on the screen. To assist in using their position for navigation, HyperTalk also included a variety of ordinal and cardinal referencing systems to simplify the syntax further. Assuming the field "typehere" is the only field on the card, the code above could also be written:
HyperTalk included the me
container which acted in the same fashion as the self
qualifier found in most object-oriented languages, allowing simple access to the current container object. Less common was the it
variable, which held the value of the last operation for certain built-in operators. For example:ask
command to display a dialog box and capture the text typed into an accompanying text field; when the dialog is completed by hitting or clicking, the value is assigned to the it
pseudo-variable. This code then copies that value into a card field using the put
assignment operator.
Containers of a given type were also available as collections with a pluralized version of that container type as its name—the collection of the fields on a card was card fields
. These collections were themselves containers with their own properties. Key among these was the number
property which was widely used during iterations and similar tasks. For instance, if one wanted to hide all the fields on a card, this could be accomplished with this code:
This code exposes another common feature of HyperTalk: that a property might have several names and operators. In this case the hide
command, and the associated show
, act by setting the value of the container's visible
property. Thus hide field i
is exactly equivalent to . A similar example was the lock screen
command that stopped visual updating, which was a short form for, where lockscreen
is a property of HyperCard itself—also a container. Many examples of this sort of syntactic sugar were found in HyperTalk, in order to simplify the syntax and improve readability of common code.
In HyperCard 2.2 and later, the collection of collections was also available as a container's parts
. This allowed a script to address all of the objects in a container with a single iterator.
A notable feature of the HyperTalk container model was its handling of text. Every collection of text, whether a literal string in a program or text typed into a text field, was itself considered a container with multiple collections of containers within it. This allowed scripts to parse text using the same navigational commands as any other container. For instance, while parsing a space-delimited data file, one might want to extract the third column, like this:in
operator. The following code finds all examples of a given pattern using the in
as part of the repeat
loop, while offset
finds the location of that pattern within the string:
HyperTalk used the same chunking system to produce structures like arrays or lists. Such a structure would be created by placing multiple data items in a variable, separated by commas. Various types of data could be imported into a HyperTalk script using strings that would get parsed as required. For instance, the position of objects on the screen was defined by a pair of numbers representing the X and Y coordinates relative to the upper left corner. The following code creates a variable called pos that holds a coordinate pair, and then manipulates this to re-position all of the buttons on a card in a diagonal from top-left to bottom-right:item
chunking expression was originally based on a comma delimiter, but later versions of HyperCard changed this to the value of itemDelimiter
, offering the ability to parse arbitrary lists and structures.
HyperTalk used an object-oriented concept for calling scripts, with objects in the stack sending "events" as messages that would be processed by handlers that declared their interest in receiving the events using the on
syntax. For instance, most GUI containers would send the mouseDown
message when the mouse button was clicked down, and then a mouseUp
message when it was released while still on top of that container, and a script could capture these events like this:mouseUp
message was first sent to that button. If the button's script object did not have a mouseUp
handler (or no script at all), it was then passed to the card, the background, the stack, any stacks whose scripts had been explicitly imported using the start using
command, the "home stack" (a user-selected always-open HyperCard stack), and finally to the HyperCard application itself.
For many simple events like mouse clicks on buttons the script would be placed directly within the object in question, the button itself. For instance, one might use the example code above within a button handler in this fashion:target
function. Likewise, scripts could send events to other containers using the send
command and then using the navigational code to refer to the container holding that handler's code:
do
command allowed for the construction of interactive interpreters by placing a text field on a card and then placing this code in the field's script:clickLine
is a global property that returns the name and line number of the last field clicked, in a form like . This code first selects all of the text on the clicked line, then extracts the line number into a local variable, then uses do
to run the text as a HyperCard script.
The mouseDown
message was sent to a button when the user clicked it, and mouseUp
was sent when the user released the mouse inside it to trigger its action. Similarly, HyperCard sent periodic idle
message, mouseEnter
, mouseLeave
, ... and various other messages related to navigation between different cards in a HyperCard stack, as well as user input (keyDown
, functionKey
, ...), and system events. As far as the scripters were concerned, there were no main event loops like in other procedural programming languages.
Unlike general rapid application development platforms, HyperCard stacks always looked like stacks - the menu bar was HyperCard's and not the programmer's (by default—scripting could add, delete and modify menus), the single window was a fixed size (in early versions), and in certain cases, commands that were central to the operation were part of the application itself, and not directly available in HyperTalk itself.
A good example of this was the creation of new cards, which was part of the application, not directly accessible from the HyperTalk language itself. A new card could only be created using the New Card menu item, which could be simulated in code usingdoMenu "New Card"
. While HyperTalk called into menu commands, menu commands also invoked handlers in HyperTalk. To run custom code when the Copy menu item was selected, one would place a script in the stack using the on doMenu itemName
handler, and then examine itemName
to see if it was "Copy".
HyperTalk also provided script control over the built-in drawing tools, simply by scripting the needed changes in paint tools and simulating mouse movements using the drag from ''start'' to ''end''
and the click at ''position''
commands.
One unique distinction between HyperCard's programming language HyperTalk and seemingly similar languages like AppleScript was that HyperTalk scripts were more lenient in what input they accepted.
Apart from the above implicit declaration of variables when a value was assigned to them, and the way values were implicitly converted between types (allowing you to e.g. ask for character 2 of 1234
), HyperCard would also recognize certain expressions and extract sub-values from them.
For example:
or
While the end result felt similar to scripters as a Bash script's expansion of variables before parsing, this was special-case syntax and did not have the pitfalls where data would be evaluated as code. So for example, all of the following are syntax errors in the melody, not function calls:
Although the HyperTalk language languished just like HyperCard itself, it interest was revived through its plugin protocol, so-called External Commands (XCMDs) and External Functions (XFCNs), which were native code containers attached to stacks (as Macintosh-specific resources) with a single entry point and return value. XCMDs and XFCNs could be called just like regular message and function handlers from HyperTalk scripts, and were also able to send messages back to the HyperCard application. Some XCMD authors added advanced features like full color support (ColorizeHC, HyperTint, AddColor), multiple special-purpose windows (Prompt, Tabloid, Textoid, Listoid, ShowDialog, MegaWindows), drag and drop support and various hardware interfaces to the language.
Various scripting languages have implemented a superset of HyperTalk (collectively known as xTalk):[4]
These clones and dialects (commonly referred to under the moniker of xTalk-languages) added various features to the language that are expected from a modern programming language, like exception handling, user-defined object properties, timers, multi-threading and even user-defined objects.
There are also languages whose syntax and structure show influences from HyperTalk, such as:
Many method names first popularized by HyperTalk have been incorporated into later languages, such as the onmouseup
event handler in JavaScript.[6] Although Asymetrix ToolBook is often also considered a HyperCard clone, its scripting language apparently bears little resemblance to HyperTalk.