0.10.1-nightly.20200529 • Published 6 years ago

assemblyscript-closures-beta v0.10.1-nightly.20200529

Weekly downloads
3
License
Apache-2.0
Repository
github
Last release
6 years ago

npm.io AssemblyScript

Actions Status npm npm@nightly

AssemblyScript compiles a strict subset of TypeScript (basically JavaScript with types) to WebAssembly using Binaryen. It generates lean and mean WebAssembly modules while being just an npm install away.

Check out the documentation or try it out in WebAssembly Studio!


The core team members and most contributors do this open source work in their free time. If you use AssemblyScript for a serious task or plan to do so, and you'd like us to invest more time on it, please donate to our OpenCollective. By sponsoring this project, your logo will show up above. Thank you so much for your support!


Motivation

You are now able to write WebAssembly, without learning a new language, and harness all these benefits WebAssembly might offer you. I think that is kind of powerful. ... It AssemblyScript is absolutely usable, and very enjoyable! - Surma, WebAssembly for Web Developers (Google I/O ’19) (May 8th, 2019)

AssemblyScript was frictionless. Not only does it allow you to use TypeScript to write WebAssembly, ... it also produces glue-free WebAssembly modules that are very small with decent performance. – Surma, Replacing a hot path in your app's JavaScript with WebAssembly (Feb 16, 2019)

Perhaps the fundamental issue to get a small .wasm file is that JavaScript is the only language for which the Web runtime is a perfect fit. Close relatives that were designed to compile to it, like TypeScript, can be very efficient as well. But languages like C, C++, Rust, and so forth were not originally designed for that purpose. – Alon Zakai, Small WebAssembly Binaries with Rust + Emscripten (Apr 18, 2018)

JavaScript's heyday as the only browser language is over, but most web developers are used to writing JavaScript, and learning a new syntax just to get access to WebAssembly is not (always) ideal. If only there was something in to bridge the gap… – Jani Tarvainen, TypeScript is the bridge between JavaScript and WebAssembly (Feb 20, 2018)

I do think compiling TypeScript into WASM is tremendously useful. It allows JavaScript developers to create WASM modules without having to learn C. – Colin Eberhardt, Exploring different approaches to building WebAssembly modules (Oct 17, 2017)

Further resources

  • Documentation Introduction, quick start, examples and general usage instructions.

  • Development instructions How to set up a development environment (to submit a pull request).

  • Project governance Discussions, goals, roadmaps, assets, etc. related to development and project organization.