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ios stack machine (ism)

ever wondered if you can use Apple Notes to write code?

(probably not.) Well, now you can!

IOS Stack Machine (ISM) is an interpreter implemented in Siri Shortcuts, thus it works in all Apple devices that have Shortcuts app installed.

Installation

You can download and get started with the shortcut from here.

Quick Start: Hello World

After installing ISM to your device, go ahead and open Notes app and create a new note. The name of your note should end with .ism, so that ISM can see your code. That's why after naming your note, append .ismto the end of title.

To the next line, append this code.

println Hello world!

In ISM, every line must contain a single instruction. First word in the line is the instruction name and the rest are the arguments. Beware that number of spaces between each argument, or between argument and the instruction matters. There should be a single space.

Also, as you've seen, you don't need to use double quotes (") to indicate strings.

After you done the steps, the whole thing must look like this:

β€œβ€

Then go to Shortcuts, and run IOS Stack Machine. You will get a prompt asking which file to run. If you don't see your note in the list, please check your note to see if the title has .ism in the end.

Manipulate the Stack: push & pop

ISM is a stack machine, meaning it operates using an internal stack. To manipulate this stack in the most basic sense, you can use these two operations:

  • push

    Adds a constant to the top of the stack.

    e.g.

      push 10      // Stack: top ->      10|
      push 4       // Stack: top ->    4 10|
      push 2       // Stack: top ->  2 4 10|
    
  • pop

    Removes the item on top of the stack. Currently, the value gets lost. (This behaviour may change in the future: the popped value may be put in register A)

    e.g

       push 10      // Stack: top ->      10|
       push 4       // Stack: top ->    4 10|
       pop          // Stack: top ->      10|
       pop          // Stack: top ->        |
    

I/O Instructions: println & readln

To print a message, you can do println ISM Rocks!. However, if you like to see the top of the stack, you can call println without any arguments. It may be useful for debugging.

readln allows you to take input from the user. It pushes the input to the stack. You can also use with an argument, such as readln Give me a number, to change the prompt message.

Binary Instructions: add, sub, div, mul & eq

Binary operations pop 2 items from the top of the stack, and then push the result back. For example, add operation in the below program pops 1 and 2, pushes 3 back to the stack:

push 1
push 2
add
println

This program outputs 3. You can also use sub, div and mul the same way.

Above we used println without any arguments. This way of using println allows you to see what is the top element of the stack.

One other binary operation is eq, which checks if 2 items are equal. For example:

push 9
push 8
eq
println       // prints 0
push 42
push 42
eq
println       // prints 1

If two elements are equal, eq returns 1 and 0 otherwise.

Branching: jump, jnz & jpop

ISM doesn't have for & while loops and if-else statements. It only allows jumping, which anyone can use to implement those higher level expressions.

  • jump instruction Jumps execution to the provided line. Can be used to skip some part of the code:

    notename.ism
    jump 3
    println This won't we printed unless some other jump will lead here.
    println Hello from line 3!
    
  • jnzinstruction Jumps execution to the provided line if the top of the stack is not zero. (Pops from stack) This instruction can be used to implement branching in your code.

    gimmeanumber.ism
    readln Give me a number. (It is better be 10 or I am angry!)
    push 10
    eq
    jnz 7
    println You made me angry!!!
    jump 8
    println Thank you for listening to me! I am happy as ever!
    
  • jpop instruction Pops a number from the stack, and then jumps to the line with this number. Does not take any arguments.

Relative Jump

If you want to jump to a line by a relative value, you can use $. e.g. jump $2 will lead you 2 lines below.

Memory: loadand store

You can assign variables with store instruction.

  • store Pops from the stack, and writes to memory.
push 3
store x // x is now 3
  • load Gets the value of the specified variable, and pushes to the stack.
push 4
push 1
add
store x
load x
println // prints 5

Copy the top of the stack: copy

If you need to copy the top of the stack, use copy instruction. It will get the value on the top (without pop), and push it again.

push 3
copy
add
println // prints 6!

Example: Fibonacci

fibbonaci.ism
println This program prints a fibbonaci number.
push 4
push 1
push 2

load A
load B

copy
store A

add
store B

push -1
add
copy
jnz 5
load B
println

Misc.

All functionality of Shortcuts can be added to ISM. However currently, the instruction set is pretty small. One misc. instruction ISM has is open. You can use this instruction to open an application in your device.

e.g.

open Spotify // or
open App Store

Limitations

  • Since it is implemented in Shortcuts, ISM runs very slow. This was something I already expected before I start the project.
  • There are no break functionality in Shortcuts, so I had a little problem while working on jump operation. To overcome this I defined a constant value of 999999999999, which is a really large number. No ISM program can have more lines than this constant (lines that are re-executed after a jump also count in this sum.)

Contribution

Any contribution is appreciated. But beware that since Shortcuts file format is binary, version control will probably be like hell.

About

Write programs in Apple Notes πŸ“. Multi-platform stack machine implemented in Siri Shortcuts.

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