On Fri, Jan 16, 2009 at 11:02 AM, The Music Guy <music...@alphaios.net> wrote: > Just out of curiousity, have there been any attempts to make a version > of Python that looks like actual English text? I mean, so much of Python > is already based on the English language that it seems like the next > natural step would be to make a programming language which is actually a > spoken one. > > For example, the following code... > >>>> import os >>>> >>>> def list_files(dirname): >>>> for p in os.listdir(dirname): >>>> print p >>>> >>>> list_files("some_dir") > foo > bar > etc > > ...might be translated as... > >>>> Import the operating system module. >>>> >>>> Define a new function as "list files" which accepts > "a path" and does the following: > For every item in the list returned by the operating system's > directory listing of the given path, do the following: > Print the item. >>>> >>>> List files from "some_dir". > foo > bar > etc > > > Obviously, creating a parser capable of handling such "code" would > require a very good understanding not only of the English language but > also of how ideas expressed in spoken languages are represented in terms > that a computer can understand. > > A language like this would, of course, blow a lot of staple coding > coding concepts like "variables," "objects," etc. right out of the > water. I think, however, that it could be done, and wouldn't necessarily > have to be any slower than any other scripting language as any text/code > could be cached as bytecode, just like Python. > > I know it's sort of silly but I think something like this would be very > interesting, maybe even useful. ^_^
You are mad :) --JamesMills -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list