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  2. GNU Guile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Guile

    GNU Ubiquitous Intelligent Language for Extensions [3] (GNU Guile) is the preferred extension language system for the GNU Project [4] and features an implementation of the programming language Scheme. Its first version was released in 1993. [1]

  3. List of GNU packages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_GNU_packages

    The package's homepage should be on the GNU website. The developers must pay attention to making their software work well with other GNU packages. Documentation should be in Texinfo format, or in a format easily convertible to Texinfo. Should use GNU Guile for its extension language, but exceptions are explicitly possible in this regard.

  4. libffi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Libffi

    Free and open-source software portal; libffi is a foreign function interface library. It provides a C programming language interface for calling natively compiled functions given information about the target function at run time instead of compile time.

  5. GNU Guix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Guix

    Inherited from the design of Nix, most of the content of the package manager is kept in a directory /gnu/store where only the Guix daemon has write-access. This is achieved via specialised bind mounts, where the Store as a file system is mounted read only, prohibiting interference even from the root user, while the Guix daemon remounts the Store as read/writable in its own private namespace.

  6. Boehm garbage collector - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boehm_garbage_collector

    The Boehm GC is used by many projects [8] that are implemented in C or C++ like Inkscape, as well as by runtime environments for a number of other languages, including Crystal, the Codon high performance python compiler, [9] the GNU Compiler for Java runtime environment, the Portable.NET project, Embeddable Common Lisp, GNU Guile, the Mono ...

  7. GStreamer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GStreamer

    GStreamer is a pipeline-based multimedia framework that links together a wide variety of media processing systems to complete complex workflows. For instance, GStreamer can be used to build a system that reads files in one format, processes them, and exports them in another.

  8. Category : Scheme (programming language) implementations

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Scheme...

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  9. LilyPond - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LilyPond

    LilyPond is mostly written in C++ and uses Scheme (interpreted by GNU Guile) as its extension language, allowing for user customization. [12] It has a relatively large codebase; as of March 10, 2017, the source includes over 600,000 lines of C++, 140,000 lines of Scheme, and 120,000 lines of Python code. [13]