slang: The S-Lang embedded interpreted language1

S-Lang is a powerful interpreted language that may be embedded into an application to make the application extensible. This enables the application to be used in ways not envisoned by the programmer, thus providing the application will much more flexibility and power. Examples of applications that take advantage of the interpreter in this way include the jed editor and the slrn newsreader.

... part of T2, get it here

URL: http://www.s-lang.org/

Author: John E. Davis <davis [at] space [dot] mit [dot] edu>
Maintainer: Rene Rebe <rene [at] t2-project [dot] org>

License: OpenSource
Status: Stable
Version: 2.3.2

Remark: Does cross compile (as setup and patched in T2).
Remark: Does not allow parallel builds.

Download: http://www.jedsoft.org/releases/slang/ slang-2.3.2.tar.bz2

T2 source: slang.cache
T2 source: slang.desc

Build time (on reference hardware): 10% (relative to binutils)2

Installed size (on reference hardware): 3.28 MB, 175 files

Dependencies (build time detected): 00-dirtree bash binutils bzip2 coreutils diffutils findutils gawk grep libpng linux-header make pcre sed tar zlib

Installed files (on reference hardware): [show]

1) This page was automatically generated from the T2 package source. Corrections, such as dead links, URL changes or typos need to be performed directly on that source.

2) Compatible with Linux From Scratch's "Standard Build Unit" (SBU).