How can you call your language a language? The one file you have posted has this line of text:
smoutput 'Hello, world!'
This barely even qualifies as a program.
If you don't have anything to show, I'd ask you to remove your project and point your 'user base', to c-p-l.sf.net. This is a real language with a working compiler, and full source code.
If you would like to refer to this comment somewhere else in this project, copy and paste the following link:
I understand that to the uninitiated, SF.net can seem pretty intimidating.
Please trust that the more technically knowledgeable of us here at cpppl.sf.net have the situation well in hand. The file you reference is, in fact, in the test module, which is used solely for the purpose of testing CVS.
Regarding your comments on c-p-l: my user base is rabidly 100% loyal to c++pl, and would not countenance such a maneuver. The author of C-P-L has no sense of elegance, grace, or user convenience. His compiler is bloated, slow, and error prone.
C++PL's compiler, when released, will be smaller by at least an order of magnitude, and will be built from the ground up with you, the user, in mind.
Thank you for your time and comments,
-D. Bron, principal.
If you would like to refer to this comment somewhere else in this project, copy and paste the following link:
How can you call your language a language? The one file you have posted has this line of text:
smoutput 'Hello, world!'
This barely even qualifies as a program.
If you don't have anything to show, I'd ask you to remove your project and point your 'user base', to c-p-l.sf.net. This is a real language with a working compiler, and full source code.
Dear user,
I understand that to the uninitiated, SF.net can seem pretty intimidating.
Please trust that the more technically knowledgeable of us here at cpppl.sf.net have the situation well in hand. The file you reference is, in fact, in the test module, which is used solely for the purpose of testing CVS.
Regarding your comments on c-p-l: my user base is rabidly 100% loyal to c++pl, and would not countenance such a maneuver. The author of C-P-L has no sense of elegance, grace, or user convenience. His compiler is bloated, slow, and error prone.
C++PL's compiler, when released, will be smaller by at least an order of magnitude, and will be built from the ground up with you, the user, in mind.
Thank you for your time and comments,
-D. Bron, principal.