Key Features of V
- Simplicity: the language can be learned over the course of a weekend
- Fast compilation: ≈110k loc/s with a Clang backend,
≈500k loc/s with native and tcc backends
(Intel i5-7500, SSD, no
optimization)
( demo video) - Easy to develop: V compiles itself in less than a second
- Performance: as fast as C (V's main backend compiles to human-readable C)
- Safety: no null, no globals, no undefined behavior (wip), immutability by default
- C to V translation (
Translating DOOM demo video
) - Hot code reloading
-
Flexible memory management
. GC by default, manual via v -gc none
, arena allocation via v -prealloc
, autofree via v -autofree
( autofree demo video). - Cross-platform UI library
- Built-in graphics library
- Easy cross-compilation
- REPL
- Built-in ORM
- Built-in web framework
- C and JavaScript backends
- Great for writing low-level software (
Vinix OS
)
Stability, future changes, post 1.0 freeze
Despite being at an early development stage, the V language is relatively stable, and doesn't change often. But there will be changes before 1.0. Most changes in the syntax are handled via vfmt automatically.
The V core APIs (primarily the
os
After the 1.0 release V is going to be in the "feature freeze" mode. That means no breaking changes in the language, only bug fixes and performance improvements. Similar to Go.
Will there be V 2.0? Not within a decade after 1.0, perhaps not ever.
To sum it up, unlike many other languages, V is not going to be always changing, with new features introduced and old features modified. It is always going to be a small and simple language, very similar to the way it is right now.
Installing V from source
--> (this is the preferred method)
Linux, macOS, Windows, *BSD, Solaris, WSL, etc.
Usually, installing V is quite simple if you have an environment that already has a
functional
git
Note: On Windows, run
make.bat
make
./make.bat
sudo apt install git build-essential make
To get started, execute the following in your terminal/shell:
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/vlang/v
cd v
make
That should be it, and you should find your V executable at
[path to V repo]/v
[path to V repo]
(Like the note above says, on Windows, use
make.bat
make
Now try running
./v run examples/hello_world.v
v run examples/hello_world.v
-
Trouble? Please see the notes above, and link to
Installation Issues
for help.
Note: V is being constantly updated. To update V to its latest version, simply run:
v up
[!NOTE] If you run into any trouble, or you have a different operating system or Linux distribution that doesn't install or work immediately, please see Installation Issues
and search for your OS and problem. If you can't find your problem, please add it to an existing discussion if one exists for your OS, or create a new one if a main discussion doesn't yet exist for your OS.
C compiler
The
Tiny C Compiler (tcc)
make
thirdparty
This compiler is very fast, but does almost no optimizations. It is best for development builds.
For production builds (using the
-prod
Otherwise, follow these instructions:
Symlinking
[!NOTE] It is highly recommended
, that you put V on your PATH. That saves you the effort to type in the full path to your v executable every time. V provides a convenience v symlink
command to do that more easily.
On Unix systems, it creates a
/usr/local/bin/v
sudo ./v symlink
On Windows, start a new shell with administrative privileges, for example by pressing the
Windows Key
cmd.exe
Run as administrator
v symlink
(or
./v symlink
That will make V available everywhere, by adding it to your PATH. Please restart your shell/editor after that, so that it can pick up the new PATH variable.
[!NOTE] There is no need to run
v symlink
more than once - v will still be available, even after v up
, restarts, and so on. You only need to run it again if you decide to move the V repo folder somewhere else.
Void Linux
Expand Void Linux instructions
# xbps-install -Su base-devel
# xbps-install libatomic-devel
$ git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/vlang/v
$ cd v
$ make
Docker
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/vlang/v
cd v
docker build -t vlang .
docker run --rm -it vlang:latest
Docker with Alpine/musl
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/vlang/v
cd v
docker build -t vlang_alpine - < Dockerfile.alpine
alias with_alpine='docker run -u 1000:1000 --rm -it -v .:/src -w /src vlang_alpine:latest'
Compiling
static
with_alpine v -skip-unused -prod -cc gcc -cflags -static -compress examples/http_server.v
with_alpine v -skip-unused -prod -cc gcc -cflags -static -compress -gc none examples/hello_world.v
ls -la examples/http_server examples/hello_world
file examples/http_server examples/hello_world
examples/http_server: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, x86-64, version 1 (SYSV), statically linked, no section header
examples/hello_world: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, x86-64, version 1 (SYSV), statically linked, no section header
You should see something like this:
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 16612 May 27 17:07 examples/hello_world
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 335308 May 27 17:07 examples/http_server
Termux/Android
On Termux, V needs some packages preinstalled - a working C compiler, also
libexecinfo
libgc
libgc-static
pkg install clang libexecinfo libgc libgc-static make git
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/vlang/v
cd v
make
Editor/IDE Plugins
To bring IDE functions for the V programming languages to your editor, check out
v-analyzer
The plugin for JetBrains IDEs (IntelliJ, CLion, GoLand, etc.) also offers a great development
experience with V. You can find all features in
its documentation
Other Plugins:
Testing and running the examples
Make sure V can compile itself:
$ v self
$ v
V 0.3.x
Use Ctrl-C or `exit` to exit
>>> println('hello world')
hello world
>>>
cd examples
v hello_world.v && ./hello_world # or simply
v run hello_world.v # this builds the program and runs it right away
v run word_counter/word_counter.v word_counter/cinderella.txt
v run news_fetcher.v
v run tetris/tetris.v
In order to build Tetris or 2048 (or anything else using
sokol
gg
System | Installation method |
---|---|
Debian/Ubuntu based |
sudo apt install libxi-dev libxcursor-dev libgl-dev libasound2-dev |
Fedora/RH/CentOS |
sudo dnf install libXcursor-devel libXi-devel libX11-devel libglvnd-devel |
NixOS | add
xorg.libX11.dev xorg.libXcursor.dev xorg.libXi.dev libGL.dev
environment.systemPackages |
V net.http, net.websocket,
v install
The net.http module, the net.websocket module, and the
v install
-d use_openssl
To install OpenSSL on non-Windows systems:
System | Installation command |
---|---|
macOS |
brew install openssl |
Debian/Ubuntu based |
sudo apt install libssl-dev |
Arch/Manjaro | openssl is installed by default |
Fedora/CentOS/RH |
sudo dnf install openssl-devel |
On Windows, OpenSSL is simply hard to get working correctly. The instructions
here
V sync
V's
sync
System | Installation command |
---|---|
macOS | already installed |
Debian/Ubuntu based |
sudo apt install libatomic1 |
Fedora/CentOS/RH |
sudo dnf install libatomic-static |
V UI
Android graphical apps
With V's
vab
./vab /path/to/v/examples/2048
https://github.com/vlang/vab
Developing web applications
Check out the
Building a simple web blog
https://github.com/vlang/gitly
Vinix, an OS/kernel written in V
V is great for writing low-level software like drivers and kernels. Vinix is an OS/kernel that already runs bash, GCC, V, and nano.
https://github.com/vlang/vinix
Acknowledgement
V thanks Fabrice Bellard for his original work on the
TCC - Tiny C Compiler
Troubleshooting
Please see the
Troubleshooting