Tombstone diagram

In computing, tombstone diagrams (or T-diagrams) consist of a set of “puzzle pieces” representing compilers and other related language processing programs. They are used to illustrate and reason about transformations from a source language (left of T) to a target language (right of T) realised in an implementation language (bottom of T). They are most commonly found describing complicated processes for bootstrapping, porting, and self-compiling of compilers, interpreters, and macro-processors.[1]

Tombstone diagram representing an Ada compiler written in C that produces machine code.
Representation of the process of bootstrapping a C compiler written in C, by compiling it using another compiler written in machine code. To explain, the lefthand T is a C compiler written in C that produces machine code. The righthand T is a C compiler written in machine code that also produces machine code. The diagram illustrates that this can be used to bootstrap the left T by using it to compile the compiler written in C.

T-diagrams were first introduced for describing bootstrapping and cross-compiling compilers by McKeeman et al. in 1971.[2] Melvin Conway described the broader concept before that with his UNCOL in 1958, to which Bratman added in 1961.[3] Later on, others, including P.D. Terry, gave an explanation and usage of T-diagrams in their textbooks on the topic of compiler construction.[1] T-diagrams are also now used to describe client-server interconnectivity on the World Wide Web.[4] A teaching tool TDiag has been implemented at Leipzig University, Germany.[5]

See also

References

  1. Terry, 1997, Chapter 2 and Chapter 3
  2. McKeeman et al., A Compiler Generator (1971)
  3. H. Bratman, “An alternate form of the ´UNCOL diagram´“, Comm. ACM 4 (March 1961) 3, p. 142
  4. Patrick Closhen, Hans-Juergen Hoffmann, et al. 1997: T-Diagrams as Visual Language to Illustrate WWW Technology, Darmstadt University of Technology, Darmstadt, Germany
  5. Michael Hielscher, et al.: TDiag: Entwicklung und Ausführung eines T-Diagramms, in German
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