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améliorer Haxe

brouillon Utilisateur:Elnabo/BrouillonHaxe

Haxe includes a set of common functions that are supported across all platforms, such as numeric data types, text, arrays, binary and some common file formats.[1][2] Haxe also includes platform-specific application programming interface (API) for Adobe Flash, C++, PHP and other languages.[1][3]

Code written in the Haxe language can be source-to-source compiled into ActionScript 3, JavaScript, Java, C++, C#, PHP, Python, Lua[4] and Node.js.[1][2][5][6] Haxe can also emit small web format SWF and Neko bytecode.

Major users of Haxe include BBC, Coca-Cola, Disney, Hasbro, Mattel, Nickelodeon, Prezi, TiVo, Toyota, and Zynga.[7][8] OpenFL and Flambe are popular Haxe frameworks that enable creating multi-platform content from one codebase.[8]

Architecture[modifier | modifier le code]

Unified language[modifier | modifier le code]

The most unique aspect of the Haxe architecture was the decision to support Flash, JavaScript and server-side scripting with one unified language.[9][10] In typical web development projects, developers must use many different languages to build an integrated web application:[9][10]

  • PHP or another server-side language to generate HTML
  • JavaScript to manipulate HTML on the client-side
  • ActionScript for graphical sections built in Flash

Haxe originated with the idea of supporting all such aspects in one language, and simplifying the communication logic between them.[9][10][11] Thus, the application logic need not deal with the implementation of the communication, which usually involves working with XML files.

The original goals of Haxe were:[9]

  • Build a language more powerful than ActionScript 2 or 3
  • Be able to easily port an ActionScript application to Haxe
  • Be able to use this language for Flash 6, 7, 8, and 9
  • Be able to use this language for JavaScript-Ajax
  • Be able to use this language for server-side programming, instead of PHP or Java

Modèle:Visible anchor[modifier | modifier le code]

The Haxe compiler is divided into one frontend and multiple backends. The frontend creates an abstract syntax tree (AST) from the source code, and performs type checking, macro expansion, and optimization on the AST. The various backends translate the processed AST into source code or generate bytecode, depending on their target.

The compiler is written in OCaml. It can be run in server-mode to provide code completion for integrated development environments (IDEs) and maintain a cache, to further speed compiling.[12]

Targets[modifier | modifier le code]

In Haxe, supported platforms are known as "targets", which are Haxe modules that provide access to core-APIs (language and bytecode targets), for the compiler-backends that are responsible for generating the respective code, and for runtimes with specific APIs that go beyond the core language support (platform-targets).

  • Bytecode Targets produce executable byte code (Neko, SWF, SWF8), that can be executed directly by the runtime (Neko VM, Adobe Flash Player, Adobe AIR). Haxe API and platform-specific API is available.
  • Language Targets produce source code (AS3, C++, C#, Java). Most source code must be compiled by a third-party compiler to produce an executable file (Flex SDK, GNU Compiler Collection (GCC), Microsoft Visual C++, .NET Framework, Java compiler). JavaScript and PHP code can be run directly, since the runtime uses just-in-time compilation. Inline code written in the target language can be inserted at any point in the application, thereby supporting the entire platform API; even features missing from the Haxe wrapper API.
  • External Modules are type definitions (extern class in Haxe) that describe the types of native APIs or libraries, so the Haxe compiler can use static type-checking.

Performance[modifier | modifier le code]

The Haxe compiler is an optimizing compiler, and uses function inlining, constant folding, and dead code elimination (DCE) to optimize the run-time performance of compiled programs.

The run-time performance of Haxe programs varies depending on the target platform:

  • ActionScript 3: Programs produced using the Haxe compiler usually run faster than programs produced using the Apache Flex SDK ActionScript Compiler.[13] However, using ActionScript Compiler 2 (ASC2) with manual optimizing,[14] many have reported comparable performance.
  • JavaScript: Programs produced using the Haxe compiler run at a comparable speed to handwritten JavaScript programs.[15] OpenFL is a common Haxe-powered framework that can run in HTML5-JavaScript, but content built with OpenFL currently suffers performance issues on mobile devices.[15]
  • C++: Programs produced using the Haxe compiler rival handwritten C++ programs, but C++ applications built with OpenFL suffer major performance issues.[16]

Development[modifier | modifier le code]

Development of Haxe began in October 2005.[17] The first beta version was released in February 2006. Haxe 1.0 was released in April 2006, with support for Adobe Flash, JavaScript, and Neko programs.

Haxe was developed by Nicolas Cannasse and other contributors, and was originally named haXe because it was short, simple, and "has an X inside", which the author asserts humorously is needed to make any new technology a success.[18]

Haxe is the successor to the open-source ActionScript 2 compiler MTASC, also built by Nicolas Cannasse,[9][19] and is released under the GNU General Public License version 2 or later.[20]

Haxe has much in common with ActionScript 3. The Haxe compiler is developed in the OCaml language. No knowledge of OCaml is needed to develop applications using Haxe.

Advantages to using Haxe include:

  • Cross platform abilities
  • A fully developed high-level language
  • Ability to target modern platforms such as C#.NET and Adobe AIR
  • Ability to target devices that support only C++[21]

Source code[modifier | modifier le code]

The recommended IDE for Haxe development is FlashDevelop,[9] which supports ActionScript 2, 3 and Haxe as first-class languages with syntax highlighting, code completion, and other features.[9][22] Code folding, code refactoring and interactive debugging is also supported within the IDE.[23]

To help leverage extant code, the open-source community has created source code converters for:

  • ActionScript 3 to Haxe[24]
  • C# to Haxe[25]

To help build applications in various platforms, or convert Haxe code into other languages, the Haxe compiler can compile Haxe to: ActionScript 3,[26] C++,[27] C#,[28] Java,[29] PHP,[30] Python.[31]

Platform support[modifier | modifier le code]

The Haxe language can compile into bytecode for different virtual machines such as the Adobe Flash Player and Neko, and can generate source code in ActionScript 3, JavaScript, Lua, and includes experimental support for C++ and C#.

This strategy of compiling to multiple source code languages is inspired by the write once, run anywhere paradigm. It also allows the programmer to choose the best platform for the job.

The following table documents platform and language support in Haxe. Most Haxe programs will function without changes in any given language, although Haxe programs that use a platform-specific API will function only on the given platform.

Code generator Output Platform Use Since Haxe version
AVM1[2] byte code Adobe Flash Player 6+ Desktop, browser 2005 (alpha)
AVM2[2] byte code Adobe Flash Player 9+, Adobe AIR, Tamarin VM Desktop, browser, server 2005 (alpha)
ActionScript 3[2] source Adobe Flash Player 9+ Server, desktop 2007 (1.12)
C++ (hxcpp)[2] source Windows, Linux, macOS Server, desktop, CLI 2009 (2.04)
C++ source Android,[32] Apple iOS,[6] Palm webOS[33] Mobile 2009 (2.04)
C#[2] source .NET Framework Server, desktop, mobile 2012 (2.10)
Java[2] source Java Server, desktop 2012 (2.10)
JavaScript[2] source HTML5, NodeJS, PhoneGap Server, desktop, browser, mobile 2006 (beta)
Neko[2] byte code NekoVM Server, desktop, CLI 2005 (alpha)
PHP[2] source PHP Server 2008 (2.0)
Python[2] source Python CLI, web, desktop 2014 (3.2)
Lua[2] source Lua CLI, web, desktop, mobile 2016 (3.3)

Language[modifier | modifier le code]

Haxe is a general-purpose language supporting object-oriented programming, generic programming, and various functional programming constructs. Features such as iterations, exceptions, and code reflection are also built-in functions of the language and libraries.[34] Unusual among programming languages, Haxe contains a type system which is both strong and dynamic. The compiler will check types implicitly and give compile-time errors, but it also enables the programmer to bypass type-checking and rely on the target platform's dynamic type-handling.

Since Haxe had its origins in ActionScript 3, all of the extant Flash API can be used, although Haxe requires better-formed code and programming standards than Adobe compilers (for example, regarding scoping and data typing).

Type system[modifier | modifier le code]

Haxe has a sophisticated and flexible type system. The type kinds it offers are classes, interfaces, function-method types, anonymous types, algebraic data types (ADTs, called enum in Haxe), and abstract types. Parametric polymorphism is possible with classes, ADTs and function types, giving the language support for generic programming based on type erasure. This includes support for variance in polymorphic functions, although not in type constructors.

The type system is static unless annotations for dynamic typing are present, for use with targets that support them. Type checking follows nominal typing with the exception of anonymous types where structural typing is used instead. Finally, type inference is supported, allowing for variable declarations without type annotations.

Classes[modifier | modifier le code]

Classes (keyword class) in Haxe are similar to those in Java or ActionScript 3. Their fields can be either methods, variables, or properties, each static or per instance respectively. Haxe supports the accessors public and private, and more advanced methods for access control (ACL, link) that are denoted using annotations. Methods and static constant variables can be inlined using the keyword inline.

Interfaces in Haxe are very similar to those in, for example, Java.

interface ICreature {
    public var birth:Date;
    public var name:String;

    public function age():Int;
}

class Fly implements ICreature {
    public var birth:Date;
    public var name:String;
	
    public function age():Int return Date.now().getFullYear() - birth.getFullYear();
}

Enumerated types[modifier | modifier le code]

Enumerated types are an important feature of the language; they can have type parameters and be recursive.[35] They provide basic support for algebraic data types, allowing the inclusion of product types, in a fashion similar to Haskell and ML. A switch expression can apply pattern matching to an enum value, allowing for elegant solutions to complex programming problems:

enum Color {
    red;
    green;
    blue;
    rgb( r : Int, g : Int, b : Int );
}

class Colors {
    static function toInt ( c : Color ) : Int {
        return switch ( c ) {
            case red: 0xFF0000;
            case green: 0x00FF00;
            case blue: 0x0000FF;
            case rgb(r, g, b): (r << 16) | (g << 8) | b;
        }
    }
    static function validCalls() {
        var redint = toInt(Color.red);
        var rgbint = toInt(Color.rgb(100, 100, 100));
    }
}

Examples of parametric enum types are the Haxe standard library types Option[36] and Either:[37]

enum Option<T> {
    Some(v:T);
    None;
}

enum Either<L, R> {
    Left(v:L);
    Right(v:R);
}

Haxe also supports generalized algebraic data types (GADTs).[38][39]

Anonymous types[modifier | modifier le code]

Anonymous types are defined by denoting their structure explicitly, using a syntax that follows the mathematical record-based representation of a type. They can be used to implement structural typing for function arguments (see below), and can be given an alias with the keyword typedef:

typedef AliasForAnon = { a:Int, b:String, c:Float->Void };

Function types[modifier | modifier le code]

Functions are first-class values in Haxe. Their type is denoted by using arrows between argument types, and between the argument type(s) and return type, as common in many functional languages. However, unlike in prominent examples like Haskell or the ML language family, not all functions are unary functions (functions with one argument only), and in Haxe, functions can't be partially applied per default. Thus, the following type signatures have different semantics than in the aforementioned languages. The type F is a function that takes an Int and a String as arguments, and returns a value of type Float.

The same notation in a language with unary functions only, would refer to a function that takes an Int as argument, and returns a function of type String->Float.

Types F2 and F3 denote the same type. Both are binary functions that return a binary function of type F. For F3 the syntax to declare a function type within a function type is used.

typedef F = Int->String->Float;

typedef F2 = Int->String->F;
typedef F3 = Int->String->(Int->String->Float);

Abstract types[modifier | modifier le code]

The latest addition to the Haxe type system is a concept termed abstract types. As used in Haxe, this refers to something different from a conventional abstract type. They are used to make conversions between types implicit, allowing reuse of extant types for specific purposes, like implementing types for units of measurement. This greatly reduces the risk of mixing up values of the same underlying type, but with different meanings (e.g., miles vs. km).

The following example assumes that the metric system is the default, while a conversion to miles is needed for legacy data. Haxe can automatically convert miles to kilometers, but not the reverse.

abstract Kilometer(Float) {
    public function new(v:Float) this = v;
}
 
abstract Mile(Float) {
    public function new(v:Float) this = v;
    @:to public inline function toKilometer():Kilometer return (new Kilometer(this / 0.62137));
}
 
class Test {
  static var km:Kilometer;
  static function main(){
    var one100Miles = new Mile(100);
    km = one100Miles;
 
    trace(km); // 160.935
  }
}

As the example shows, no explicit conversion is needed for the assignment "km = one100Miles;" to do the right thing.

Structural typing[modifier | modifier le code]

In many functional programming languages, structural typing plays a major role. Haxe employs it in the presence of anonymous types, using the nominative typing of object-oriented programming, when only named types are involved. Anonymous types in Haxe are analogous to the implicit interfaces of the language Go as to typing. In contrast with Go interfaces, it is possible to construct a value using an anonymous type.

class FooBar {

   public var foo:Int;
   public var bar:String;

   public function new(){ foo=1; bar="2";}

   function anyFooBar(v:{foo:Int,bar:String}) trace(v.foo);

   static function test(){
        var fb = new FooBar();
        fb.anyFooBar(fb);
        fb.anyFooBar({foo:123,bar:"456"});
   }
}

See also[modifier | modifier le code]

Modèle:Portal

Also on the Haxe platform:

Other languages that compile to JavaScript:

Other multi-platform languages:

References[modifier | modifier le code]

  1. a b et c (en) Franco Ponticelli, Professional haXe and Neko, Wiley, (ISBN 0470122137, lire en ligne)
  2. a b c d e f g h i j k l et m Introduction to the Haxe Standard Library, Haxe Docs
  3. Target Specific APIs, Introduction to the Haxe Standard Library, Haxe Docs
  4. « Hello Lua! - Haxe » (consulté le )
  5. « hxnodejs (4.0.9) » (consulté le )
  6. a et b Haxe, iPhone & C++ At Last, GameHaxe website
  7. Companies using Haxe, Haxe Docs
  8. a et b Lars Doucet, « Dear Adobe: Support Haxe, save your Tools », Gamasutra,
  9. a b c d e f et g (en) John Grden, Patrick Mineault, Aral Balkan, Marc Hughes et Wade Arnold, The Essential Guide to Open Source Flash Development, Apress, (ISBN 1430209941, lire en ligne), Chapter 9 (Using Haxe)
  10. a b et c « Haxe Interview », {{Article}} : paramètre « périodique » manquant, Io Programmo,‎ , p. 1–6 (lire en ligne)
  11. (en) Matt Fisher, HTML5 for Flash Developers, Packt Publishing Ltd, (ISBN 1849693331, lire en ligne)
  12. Server mode command-line: haxe --wait [host:]port
  13. AS3 vs haXe performance, SplashDust website
  14. AS3 Performance Optimization, Starling Wiki
  15. a et b Vadim Dyachenko, « On "You can't make good HTML5 games in Haxe" », Yellow After Life,
  16. Talha Kaya, « OpenFL & Haxe, A Bumpy Start », Gamasutra,
  17. « Haxe 3.2 Release », Github
  18. « Haxe mailing list post on naming »
  19. MTASC Compiler, MTASC website
  20. « Haxe license page »
  21. « Haxe introduction page »
  22. Main Page, FlashDevelop Wiki, "first class support for Flash ActionScript (AS2 and AS3) and Haxe development"
  23. Haxe Support, FlashDevelop Wiki
  24. as3hx, AS3 to Haxe converter, Haxe source code repository
  25. CS2HX - C# to haXe converter, CodePlex project hosting
  26. Haxe Compiler Targets, Haxe docs, "ActionScript 3, Source"
  27. Haxe Compiler Targets, Haxe docs, "C++, Source"
  28. Haxe Compiler Targets, Haxe docs, "C#, Source"
  29. Haxe Compiler Targets, Haxe docs, "Java, Source"
  30. Haxe Compiler Targets, Haxe docs, "PHP, Source"
  31. Haxe Compiler Targets, Haxe docs, "Python, Source"
  32. « Blog post mentioning Android port progress »
  33. « How to get started with Haxe 2.06 and the webOS PDK [archived on WayBackMachine] » [archive du ]
  34. « Haxe language reference »
  35. « Haxe reference detailing the use of enum »
  36. « haxe/Option.hx at development · HaxeFoundation/haxe », sur Github
  37. « haxe/Either.hx at development · HaxeFoundation/haxe », sur Github
  38. « Language Features », sur Haxe - The Cross-platform Toolkit, Haxe Foundation (consulté le )
  39. « haxe/TestGADT.hx at development · HaxeFoundation/haxe », sur Github
  40. « A Scala to JavaScript compiler »

External links[modifier | modifier le code]

{{Adobe Flash}} {{JavaScript}} [[Category:Object-based programming languages]] [[Category:OCaml software]] [[Category:Programming languages created in 2005]] [[Category:Software using the GPL license]] [[Category:Source-to-source compilers]]