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Welcome

Avail is a multi-paradigmatic general purpose programming language whose feature set emphasizes support for articulate programming. Avail is an open-source project that comprises a language virtual machine and a standard library. Both are released under the 3-clause BSD license.

The current release version of Avail is 1.4.1 . This is a stable release, and recommended for production use.

Download a binary or source

distribution of Avail here!

To whet your appetite for Avail, below is a snippet from our largest example, Wump the Wumpus . This application is an homage to Gregory Yob's BASIC classic, Hunt the Wumpus, and can be found in its entirety (16 modules) in the /examples module root.

(The parameters are dependency injected I/O functions, in case you were wondering.)

Recent News

2019.09.27: Avail 1.4.1 is out and recommended for all production use. This release addresses many long-term stability issues, as well as fixes for the dynamic translator that improve both performance and reliability.

2019.08.16: Avail 1.4.0 is out and recommended for all production use. Avail has been rebuilt to use Gradle instead of Apache Ant. Interoperation with Java has received significant attention, and foreign function interfaces now work much more reliably and elegantly. Avail has received multitudinous improvements to its virtual machine and standard library, for correctness, performance, and ease of use. Despite the staleness of the website, Avail is evolving constantly — you can see this on GitHub. We hope to rebuild the website and commit more effort to it, but the active Avail team has shrunk to two developers. If you need to get in touch with anyone on the Avail team, send an email to team@availlang.org and we will try to respond as quickly as possible. Thanks!

2018.05.25: The Avail team would like to thank JetBrains for supporting Avail development through a grant of open source licenses for IntelliJ Ultimate and related products. We hope to get proper tribute up on our acknowledgments page in the next few days, but the Avail team is wildly overcommitted to other non-Avail-related projects at the moment. The Avail team would also like to thank Jane Elizabeth of JAXenter.com for her positive article. We are aware of the discussion on Hacker News, and will try to participate if time allows. We have a new website in the works (no ETA, sorry), which we hope will address the many deficiencies of our current website. Unfortunately, the biggest deficiency is the team's (in)ability to keep the website up-to-date with accurate content. Avail has seen numerous colossal changes in the past year — e.g., we introduced custom lexical rules to support arbitrary, modular, incremental, backtracking tokenization of source files, we replaced the L2 interpreter with an optimizing dynamic translator for improved performance, etc. — but the team is just a few people, non-Avail-related projects are many, and documentation always ends up being a low priority for us until we start thinking hard about releasing. I apologize for the inadequacies of the site and the documentation, but please do not be deterred! If you need to get in touch with anyone on the Avail team, send an email to team@availlang.org and we will try to respond as quickly as possible. Thanks!

2017.08.08: Avail now has modular lexers.

2016.11.21: Avail has a sparkly new compiler. While blogging is fun, creating Avail is even more fun, so surely you can forgive this hiatus…

2015.08.16: The Avail team belatedly welcomes another member, Jared Mehl, who has actually been working with us for several months already. (Obviously we need to work on our publicity skills…)

2015.01.12: The Avail team welcomes its newest member, Robbert van Dalen. This is an exciting occasion for Avail, as Robbert is the first team member who is neither 1) a resident of the United States or 2) already known to The Avail Foundation's founding members. We choose to take this as evidence that Avail's sphere of influence is expanding. :)

2014.12.19: File I/O is now stable. This also marks the first entry in Mark's blog.

2014.10.28: The Avail Retreat of 2014, the first installment of Todd's blog, is now available. Also, Avail now incorporates server-side WebSocket and can function as an app server. And it's 20% faster and uses 73% less memory.

2014.10.16: Avail Newsletters, Edition #7: File I/O. Mostly. is now available. The construction work on file I/O and iterators is still ongoing, but open again for read-bound traffic.

2014.05.28: In response to the bug described in ticket 83, new versions of the Avail workbench's Windows installer and Unix bash script have been uploaded to the website and repository, respectively. To download the new installer, visit the download page. To update your script, do a git pull (as described on the Unix install instructions page).

2014.05.03: Fibonacci, the next installment of the Learning Avail tutorial series, is now available.

2014.05.02: We have enabled Google Analytics Demographics and Interest Reporting in the hope that it will provide information helpful in expanding our audience, and have updated our Privacy Policy accordingly.

2014.05.01: The Avail team welcomes its newest members, Evan Beach and Peter Monks. There have also been minor fixes to the tutorials.

2014.04.30: The Avail FAQ is now available.

2014.04.28: Avail Newsletters, Edition #6: Hello, World! is now available. (Oh, and we also changed the entire website and added a download link.)

Site Map

This site is under active development, and, like Avail itself, it is by no means "complete". It is, nonetheless, home to a significant volume of useful content. This content can be accessed from the side bar to the left.