# Python++ I created this language as a result of my frustrations with Python. Currently my language is significantly worse than Python, and needs a lot of work before it can be considered functional. ## Hello World ``` print("Hello, World!\n"); ``` The following is a non-comprehensive list of stuff that currently works. ## Assignment & Declaration ``` a: str = "Hello, World!\n"; b: int = 0; c: str; // declared, but not yet assigned ``` ## Expressions ``` a: int = 34; b: int = 35; c: int = 1; d: int = a + b * c; // with correct operator precedence ``` ## Structs ``` struct MyStruct { field1: int, field2: str, field3: SomeOtherStruct } my_struct: MyStruct = MyStruct.{ field1=1, field2="Hello, World!", field3=SomeOtherStruct.{...} // whatever SomeOtherStruct takes }; my_struct.field1 = 2; plus5: int = my_struct.field1 + 5; ``` ## Enums ``` enum Weekday { Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday } day: Weekday = Weekday.Tuesday; match day in { case Monday { ... } // handle Monday case Tuesday { ... } // handle Tuesday case Wednesday { ... } // and so on... case Thursday { ... } case Friday { ... } case _ { ... } // default } ``` or ``` enum IntResult { Ok(int), Err(Error) } result: IntResult = IntResult.Ok(5); match result in { case Ok(num) { ... } // num is defined in this scope case Err(err) { ... } // similarly err is defined in this scope } ``` Currently, polymorphic structs/enums are not supported, however I plan to eventually do so. ## Functions ``` func random_number(seed: int) -> int { return 42; } my_random_number: int = random_number(69); func min(a: int, b: int) -> int { if a < b return a; return b; } the_min: int = min(5, 10); ``` ## Arrays ``` numbers: int[] = [:int, 0, 1, 2, 3, 4]; // array literal must state element type (for now) numbers = [:int, 2*x for x in numbers]; // list comprehension must also (for now) ``` ## For loops ``` // prints numbers 0-9 for i in range(0, 10) { print(int_to_str(i)+"\n"); } ``` ## While loops a: int = 0; while a < 10 { print(int_to_str(a)+"\n"); a = a + 1; } ## Reading files ## Importing ## Assertions ## Tuples