Fur is GPL and will only ever target GPL compilers. Fur supports closures, integer math, boolean
logic, lists, structures (similar to objects), and strings (implemented as
-[ropes](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rope_(data_structure)))). It doesn't yet support
+[ropes](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rope_(data_structure))). It doesn't yet support
exceptions, multithreading, modules, or anything resembling a standard library. If that sounds
like something you want to use in production code, good luck to you.