In the context of computing, a polyglot is a computer program or script written in a valid form of multiple programming languages, which performs the same operations or output independently of which of the chosen programming language in which it is compiled or interpreted. Intuition suggests that polyglot programs should be impossible or very difficult to write. Intuition, in this case, is wrong.
Generally polyglots are written in a combination of C (which allows redefinition of tokens with a preprocessor) and a scripting programming language such as Lisp, Perl or sh.
The two most commonly used techniques for constructing a polyglot program are to make liberal use of languages which use different characters for comments and to redefine various tokens as others in different languages. Often good use is made of quirks of syntax. These are demonstrated in this public domain polyglot written in ANSI C, PHP and GNU bash shell:
#define a /*
# /dev/null > /dev/null \ ;
// 2> /dev/null; x=a;
$x=5 // 2> /dev/null \ ;
if (($x))
// 2> /dev/null; then
return 0;
// 2> /dev/null; fi
#define e ?>
#define b */
#include
Note the following:
The term is sometimes applied to programs that are valid in more than one language, but do not strictly perform the same function in each. One use for this form is a file that runs as a DOS batch file, then re-runs itself in Perl:
@echo off perl "%~dpnx0" %* goto endofperl @rem '; #!perl print "Hello, world!\n"; :endofperl
This allows the creation of Perl scripts that can be run on DOS systems with minimal effort.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Polyglot (computing)".
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