ScriptsMay 16, 2026·3 min read

V — Simple Fast Systems Programming Language

V is a statically typed compiled language focused on simplicity, performance, and ease of use, offering C-like speed with a clean modern syntax and built-in memory safety.

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Native · 98/100Policy: allow
Agent surface
Any MCP/CLI agent
Kind
Skill
Install
Single
Trust
Trust: Established
Entrypoint
V Language
Universal CLI install command
npx tokrepo install cb5fc4ef-5165-11f1-9bc6-00163e2b0d79

Introduction

V is a general-purpose programming language designed for writing maintainable and predictable software with minimal complexity. It compiles directly to C and achieves performance comparable to C/C++ while offering memory safety, a clean syntax, and fast compilation speeds measured in seconds for large codebases.

What V Does

  • Compiles to native machine code via C backend with optional direct LLVM codegen
  • Provides automatic memory management without a garbage collector using ownership semantics
  • Offers built-in concurrency with coroutines and channels similar to Go
  • Includes a standard library covering networking, JSON, crypto, and UI
  • Supports hot code reloading for rapid development iteration

Architecture Overview

V's compiler is written in V itself (self-hosted) and translates V source into C code, which is then compiled by any C compiler (GCC, Clang, MSVC). This two-stage approach provides broad platform support while keeping the V compiler simple. The compiler is single-pass and produces output in under a second for most projects.

Self-Hosting & Configuration

  • Clone the repository and run make to bootstrap from the pre-compiled C source
  • No external dependencies required beyond a C compiler
  • Use v symlink to add V to your PATH system-wide
  • Configure project settings via v.mod manifest file in the project root
  • Cross-compile to Linux, macOS, Windows, FreeBSD, and WASM from any platform

Key Features

  • Sub-second compilation even for large codebases
  • No null, no undefined behavior, no implicit type casts
  • Built-in testing framework with v test
  • Package manager (VPM) for community libraries
  • Interoperability with C libraries via direct header imports

Comparison with Similar Tools

  • Go — V has a similar syntax philosophy but compiles to native code without a runtime or GC
  • Rust — Rust offers stronger memory guarantees but has a steeper learning curve and slower compile times
  • Zig — Zig provides low-level control for systems programming; V prioritizes simplicity over manual memory management
  • Nim — Both compile via C, but V emphasizes minimalism and faster compilation
  • C — V provides modern safety features while matching C performance

FAQ

Q: Does V have a garbage collector? A: No. V uses a combination of ownership tracking and autofree to manage memory at compile time without runtime overhead.

Q: Can I use C libraries from V? A: Yes. V can directly call C functions and use C headers with minimal wrapper code through its C interop layer.

Q: How mature is the V ecosystem? A: V is actively developed with a growing package registry (VPM) and standard library, though it is younger than Go or Rust.

Q: What platforms does V support? A: V targets Linux, macOS, Windows, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and WebAssembly, with cross-compilation built in.

Sources

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