| # Compiler Explorer Road Map |
| |
| This document is an attempt to capture thoughts on the future direction of Compiler Explorer. Last updated May 2021. |
| |
| ## Areas to improve |
| |
| ### Support more languages and compilers |
| |
| A number of the open issues are to add more languages, libraries and compilers. Continuing to make it easier for others |
| to submit PRs to add new compilers is very important. This has improved, but not all compilers are installed using the |
| new approach. There's documentation on [adding a compiler](AddingACompiler.md), |
| [adding a new language](AddingALanguage.md) |
| and [adding a library](AddingALibrary.md). |
| |
| ### Multiple file support |
| |
| As the site is getting used more and more, and in different ways to the initial intention, we would benefit from being |
| able to support multiple files in compilations. That is, C++ source files, and header files compiled together, or even |
| multiple C++ files compiled and linked together. This would let us showcase technologies like link-time optimization, or |
| C++ modules. |
| |
| ### Code quality and testing |
| |
| A project like Compiler Explorer thrives best when many people can easily contribute. There are many languages, |
| libraries, use-cases, and visualisations that the "core" team doesn't have experience with. In order to remain |
| supportable and keep serving various programming communities, we need to make the project easy to work with. We can |
| improve code quality (e.g. move to transpiling from Typescript or similar to give us stronger types), testing |
| (increasing coverage, adding client tests), and documentation to make it easier to on-board new contributors and keep it |
| easy to support existing code. |
| |
| ## Considerations |
| ### Tensions |
| |
| There's an inherent tension between the standalone, run-it-yourself version of CE and the scalable, AWS-backed CE |
| instance. Care must be taken to keep the standalone version usable. |
| |
| ### Priorities |
| |
| Above all, the priority is to keep the main CE site up, stable and dependable. That also means that URLs should live |
| forever once they are created, which places a burden on us to keep existing compilers and libraries available forever. |
| |
| ### Non-goals |
| |
| Compiler Explorer will remain open-source and non-commercial. There are no plans at all to add "freemium" content. We do |
| have a Patreon site, Github sponsors, Paypal donations, and some corporate sponsors. Funds from these source help |
| support the cost of running the servers, and incentivize the core team. Previously our goal was to remain "ad-free", |
| that has been relaxed slightly to allow up to three company sponsor logos visible at the top right of the screen. |
| |
| ## Goals |
| |
| ### 2021 goals |
| |
| * **Login support**. Support logging in to the site with GitHub, Google, etc. We will _never_ force you to log in for |
| basic features, and of course will update the Privacy Policy. I won't be selling anything to do with user info etc, |
| either: Logging in will be purely used to make _your_ life easier and allow you to manage things like shared settings |
| and configuration, listing short URLs you've created (and potentially being able to remove them); and _maybe_ being |
| able to make user-named short URLs (e.g., "godbolt.org/u/mattgodbolt/ctad-example"). This goal is a personal pet |
| project of [Matt's](http://github.com/mattgodbolt/). |
| * **Multi-file support**. Multiple file compilation units to open the door to seeing LTO and maybe modules. This may |
| include being able to use a `CMake` file to build things. |
| * **Modernising the codebase**. Moving the codebase to TypeScript, or something similar that will allow us to worry less |
| about differences between front-end and back-end code (old Javascript versions), and help us attract more people to |
| the project. |
| * **More compilers and libraries**. Plus finishing off the last stragglers of installation. |
| |
| |
| ### Prior years' goals |
| |
| #### 2020 |
| |
| **Was**: Finally tackle small screen device support. |
| |
| **How did we do?**: a tiled, single-page read-only view was implemented. Our mobile support is about the best we could |
| hope for given the limitations of space and our current reliance on Microsoft's Monaco editor, which doesn't support |
| mobile at all. |