Blog tagged M1

First official release of Ceylon IDE

Today, we're proud to announce the first official release of the Ceylon IDE.

teaser

This release is fully compatible with the already-released Ceylon M1 "Newton" command line distribution which contains the compiler, documentation compiler, language module, and runtime. On the other hand, Ceylon IDE can be used as a standalone Ceylon development tool, even if the full Ceylon distribution is not already separately installed.

You can install Ceylon IDE from our Eclipse plugin update site. The welcome page is a gentle way to get started with Ceylon.

Main features

A full list of features with screenshots can be found here.

Among the features that have greatly enriched the IDE since its first pre-release builds, the following stand out:

  • A Ceylon perspective, welcome page, and cheat sheets.
  • Wizards to create new Ceylon projects, modules, packages, and units.
  • Cross-project dependencies and navigation: add another Ceylon project on the build path, and dependencies are automatically handled.
  • Full integration with the Ceylon module architecture: resolve dependencies in an external module repository, and easily export your Ceylon project as a module to a selected repository.
  • Enhancements to refactorings, including the ability to refactor even in dirty (unsaved) editors.
  • New quick-fixes: for example, when an identifier is unknown, automatically create a new file containing a stub for the missing declaration.
  • Improved autocompletion: proposals are now sorted to prioritize those which are assignable to the expected type, as well as those which are declared nearby.
  • Customization: easily configure your own colors for syntax highlighting.
  • And, of course, many adjustments and bug fixes to provide a stable release.

About Ceylon

This page provides a quick introduction to the language. The draft language specification is the complete definition.

Source code

The source code for Ceylon, its specification, and its website, and its IDE is freely available from GitHub:

https://github.com/ceylon

Issues

Bugs and suggestions may be reported in GitHub's issue tracker.

Community

The Ceylon community site includes documentation, the current draft of the language specification, the roadmap and information about getting involved.

http://ceylon-lang.org

First official release of Ceylon

Today, we're proud to announce the release of Ceylon M1 "Newton". This is the first official release of the Ceylon command line compiler, documentation compiler, language module, and runtime, and a major step down the roadmap toward Ceylon 1.0.

You can get it here:

http://ceylon-lang.org/download

We plan a compatible M1 release of Ceylon IDE later this week.

Language features

In terms of the language itself, M1 has essentially all the features of Java except enumerated types, user-defined annotations, and reflection. It even incorporates a number of improvements over Java, including:

  • JVM-level primitive types are ordinary classes in Ceylon
  • type inference and type argument inference based on analysis of principal types
  • streamlined class definitions via elimination of getters, setters, and constructors
  • optional parameters with default values
  • named arguments and the "object builder" syntax
  • intersection types, union types, and the bottom type
  • static typing of the null value and empty sequences
  • declaration-site covariance and contravariance instead of wildcard types
  • more elegant syntax for type constraints
  • top-level function and value declarations instead of static members
  • nested functions
  • richer set of operators
  • more elegant syntax for annotations
  • immutability by default

Support for the following language features is not yet available:

  • first-class and higher-order functions
  • comprehensions
  • algebraic types, enumerated types, and switch/case
  • mixin inheritance
  • member class refinement
  • reified generics
  • user-defined annotations and the type safe metamodel

Furthermore, numeric operators are not currently optimized by the compiler, so numeric code is expected to perform poorly.

This page provides a quick introduction to the language. The draft language specification is the complete definition.

Modularity and runtime

Ceylon modules may be executed on any standard JVM. The toolset and runtime for Ceylon is based around .car module archives and module repositories. The runtime supports a modular, peer-to-peer class loading architecture, with full support for module versioning and multiple repositories.

This release of Ceylon includes support for local module repositories. Support for remote repositories and the shared community repository modules.ceylon-lang.org will be available in the next release.

Chapter 7 of the language specification contains much more information about the Ceylon module system and command line tools.

SDK

At this time, the only module available is the language module ceylon.language, included in the distribution.

Java interoperability

There are a number of issues that currently affect interoperability with Java. These issues are a top priority for the next release.

Source code

The source code for Ceylon, its specification, and its website, is freely available from GitHub:

https://github.com/ceylon

Issues

Bugs and suggestions may be reported in GitHub's issue tracker.

Community

The Ceylon community site includes documentation, the current draft of the language specification, the roadmap and information about getting involved.

http://ceylon-lang.org

Acknowledgement

We're deeply indebted to the community volunteers who contributed a substantial part of the current Ceylon codebase, working in their own spare time. The following people have contributed to this release:

Stephane Epardaud, Tako Schotanus, Gary Benson, Emmanuel Bernard, Andrew Haley, Tom Bentley, Ales Justin, David Festal, Flavio Oliveri, Sergej Koshchejev, Max Rydahl Andersen, Mladen Turk, James Cobb, Ben Keating, Michael Brackx, Ross Tate, Ivo Kasiuk, Gertjan Assies, Nicolas Leroux, Julien Viet