I believe that if a programming tool or language is developed locally
for a local crowd of customers, there will always be the possibility that
the local language will be used.

In 1992, we helped some friends in Poland (Lodz) to transform their
applications from a polish machine called ODRA (it was based on a british
ICL machine) to an IBM 4381 mainframe. On the ODRA, they had a report
writer using a language called TABU. This language used polish keywords;
if was a little bit like RPG 2, but in my opinion more user friendly.

ODRA, by the way, is the polish name of the river Oder which separates
Poland from Germany.

My task was: to convert the some hundred TABU reports to COBOL programs,
so I first had to learn a little polish, of course. I still remember that there was a special symbol for "counter" or "tally", the polish name, which was a strange
combination (in my eyes) of Zs and Ys. Don't remember it.

Kind regards

Bernd



Am 22.11.2012 21:51, schrieb Paul Gilmartin:
On Thu, 22 Nov 2012 19:33:14 +0000, Lindy Mayfield wrote:
But to still bring things back on topic, my initial query was, "Is there anything so 
inherently better about the English language that makes it more useful for computer 
languages?"

Which, with a little searching, got me to:

     
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-English-based_programming_languages#Languages_based_on_symbols_instead_of_keywords

Note the second entry in that section.

-- gil

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