GPC -- Gnu Pascal Compiler
			==========================

	All parts of this compiler are copyrighted (C) by the Free
	Software Foundation, Inc (FSF).

	The Pascal run time system is donated to FSF to be distributed
	according to the FSF Library Copyright.

	See files COPYING and COPYING.LIB in corresponding directories
	to see the permissions you have and what you don't have when
	using this software.

	Everything is done with quite minimal changes to the GCC code,
	so don't be too excited if you get error messages telling that
	ANSI C denies something, or that your STRUCT definition is
	broken, and what not. (Please send me sample code that
	triggers such messages so I can fix it).

	I did it this way, as I wanted it to be easier to upgrade to
	new releases of GCC, and of course since it was a lot easier
	for me to modify code than to write it from scratch.

	There are some new files not present in the GCC; gpc-parser.y
	which is the bison parser for the language, gpc-lex.c that has
	the lexical analyzer stuff, gpc-defs.h which has definitions
	used in various places, and gpc-util.c which includes the glue
	to convert Pascal's way of thinking to the way the original
	C-oriented c-*.c files think, and most of the new routines.

	All changes are flagged with #ifdef GPC (except those that are
	already merged with the mainline GCC code).  Some language
	independent files have also been modified, but most of the
	changes are quite minimal or if not, new code has been added
	to handle pascal. All in all, the GCC compiler is quite well
	designed to support at least these kind of languages.

	GPC tries to be (for now) a Level 0 ISO 7185 compatible Pascal
	processor. There are two levels in the Pascal standard; level
	0 processors are not required to understand conformant arrays
	(this is the only difference). The conformant arrays are
	partially implemented in this version, but more likely they
	crash the compiler than work at this time.

	I don't	have the ANSI standard, so I can't make
	the comparision between ISO & ANSI, and it not the most
	important thing now, anyway.  After everything else works,
	it should be *easy* to implement the ANSI standard
	modifications to the compiler. I think.

	GPC also imlements a large subset of the ISO/IEC 10206
	international standard of the Extended Pascal language.
	(See GPC.GUIDE for more info).

	See the file PROBLEMS to find out the major problems
	of the GPC version in this directory.

	The file NEW-PVS-LIST contains the current results of running
	the Pascal Validation Suite conformance tests (about 199
	tests), one line (word) to tell why the test failed. PASSed
	tests are not mentioned.  PVS tests also contain QUALITY
	tests, errorhandling tests, implementation dependent tests,
	but they will be checked later.
	
	ChangeLog contains a partial edit history.

			Yours,
	
				Juki
				jtv@hut.fi
	
				Jukka Virtanen
				Helsinki University of Technology,
				Computing Centre,
				Finland

	Anonymous ftp:

	Newest "public" gpc snapshot is available via anonymous
	ftp in host kampi.hut.fi in directory jtv/gnu-pascal