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171 lines
5.3 KiB
Markdown
171 lines
5.3 KiB
Markdown
---
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language: LDPL
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filename: learnLDPL.ldpl
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contributors:
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- ["Martín del Río", "https://github.com/lartu"]
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---
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**LDPL** is a powerful, C++ transpiled, open-source programming language designed
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from the ground up to be excessively expressive, readable, fast and easy to learn.
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It mimics plain English, in the likeness of older programming languages like COBOL,
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with the desire that it can be understood by anybody. It's very portable and runs on a
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plethora of different architectures and operating systems and it even supports UTF-8
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out of the box.
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[Read more here.](https://github.com/lartu/ldpl)
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```coffeescript
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# This is a single line comment in LDPL.
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# LDPL doesn't have multi-line comments.
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# LDPL is a case-insensitive language: dIsPlaY and DISPLAY are the same
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# statement, and foo and FOO name the same variable.
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# An LDPL source file is divided in two sections, the DATA section and
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# the PROCEDURE section.
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DATA:
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# Within the DATA section, variables are declared.
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myNumber is number # Defines a real number.
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myString is text # Defines a string.
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myList is number list # Defines a list of numbers.
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myMap is number map # Defines a map of numbers.
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# LDPL understands four data types: two scalar types (NUMBER, TEXT)
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# and two container types (LISTs and MAPs).
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# LISTs can be TEXT LISTs or NUMBER LISTs, while MAPs can be
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# TEXT MAPs and NUMBER MAPs. You can also chain many containers
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# to create larger data types:
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textListList is text list list
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myMulticontainer is number list list map
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# Defines a map of lists of lists of numbers.
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PROCEDURE:
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# Within the PROCEDURE section, your code is written.
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store -19.2 in myNumber # Use the STORE statement to assign values
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store "Hi there" in myString # to variables.
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push 890 to myList # Use PUSH - TO to append values to lists.
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push 100 to myList
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push 500 to myList
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store 45 in myMap:"someIndex" # Use the : operator to index containers.
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push list to textListList # Push an empty list into a list of lists.
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push "LDPL is nice!" to textListList:0 #Push text to the pushed list.
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display "Hello World!" # Use the DISPLAY statement to print values.
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# The display statement can receive multiple values separated by spaces.
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display crlf "How are you today?" myNumber myString crlf
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# CRLF is the standard line break value in LDPL.
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display textListList:0:0 " Isn't it?" crlf
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# IF statements in LDPL are extremely verbose:
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if myNumber is equal to -19.2 and myList:0 is less than 900 then
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display "Yes!" crlf
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else if myMap:"someIndex" is not equal to 45 then
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display "This is an else if!" crlf
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else
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display "Else!" crlf
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end if
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# Valid LDPL comparisson operators are
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# - IS EQUAL TO
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# - IS NOT EQUAL TO
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# - IS LESS THAN
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# - IS GREATER THAN
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# - IS LESS THAN OR EQUAL TO
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# - IS GREATER THAN OR EQUAL TO
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if "Hi there!" is not equal to "Bye bye!" then
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display "Yep, those weren't equal." crlf
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end if
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# LDPL normally doesn't understand inline expressions, so you
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# cannot do stuff like:
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# if myNumber - 9 * 2 is equal to 10 then
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# LDPL will set your computer on fire and burst your screen if you do so.
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# WHILE loops follow the same rules
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store 0 in myNumber
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while myNumber is less than 10 do
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display "Loop number " myNumber "..." crlf
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in myNumber solve myNumber + 1 # You can do math like this.
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repeat
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# You can use 'break' and 'continue' inside loops just like any other language.
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# LDPL also has FOR loops and FOR EACH loops
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for myNumber from 0 to 100 step 2 do
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display myNumber crlf
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repeat
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for each myNumber in myList do
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display myNumber
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repeat
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display "Enter your name: "
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accept myString # Use ACCEPT to let the user input values.
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display "Hi there, " myString crlf
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display "How old are you?: "
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accept myNumber
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if myNumber is greater than 200 then
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display "Woah, you are so old!" crlf
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end if
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wait 1000 milliseconds # Pause the program for a whole second.
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# Let's do some math
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store 1.2 in myNumber
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in myNumber solve myNumber * (10 / 7.2) # Operators are separated by spaces.
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floor myNumber
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display myNumber crlf
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get random in myNumber # get a random number between 0 and 1
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# and store it in myNumber
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# Functions in LDPL are called sub-procedures. Sub-procedures, like source
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# files, are divided in sections. The sections found in sub-procedures are
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# the PARAMETERS section, the LOCAL DATA section and the PROCEDURE section.
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# All sections except the PROCEDURE section can be skipped if they aren't
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# used. If no PARAMTERS nor LOCAL DATA sections are used, the PROCEDURE
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# keyword may be omited.
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sub myFunction
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parameters:
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a is number # LDPL is pass by reference
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b is number
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result is number # Thus you can return values through a parameter.
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local data:
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c is number
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procedure:
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get random in c
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in result solve a + b * c
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end sub
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sub sayHello
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display "Hi there!" crlf
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return
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display "This won't be displayed :("
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end sub
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call myFunction with 1 2 myNumber
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display myNumber crlf
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call sayHello
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call sayBye # sub-procedures may be called before they are declared
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sub sayBye
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display "Bye!"
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end sub
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# One of the greatest features of LDPL is the ability to create your
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# own statements.
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create statement "say hi" executing sayHello
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say hi
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create statement "random add $ and $ in $" executing myFunction
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random add 1 and 2 in myNumber
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display myNumber crlf
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exit
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```
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## Further Reading
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* [LDPL Docs](https://docs.ldpl-lang.org)
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