Ancient Chinese programming language: https://github.com/wenyan-lang/wenyan
9 0 ReplyNot the Mandelbrot set 😭
1 0 Reply
I’m think it’s actually a native North American script. Ojibwe.
1 0 ReplyLemme guess, coding a pager?
201 2 ReplyBruh
47 0 Reply15 0 ReplyLook long enough to find this comment
6 0 ReplyBig oof
12 0 ReplyNo, big booms.
13 0 Reply
That looks like Minecraft enchantments.
14 0 ReplyThis looks cool! I would hate to have to read or maintain this code. But it looks cool as hell.
35 1 ReplyLooks like minecraft enchantment table language
31 0 ReplyIt is Minecraft enchanting table language: source
13 0 Reply
Sorry to be the piss in a shitpost but that is not Hebrew. Looks to be Amharic.
98 1 ReplyDef not Amharic
Source: I'm Eritrean and we share our alphabet (Ge'ez)
27 0 ReplyDamn, thanks for the correction :)
8 0 Reply
36 0 Reply16 0 ReplyThe whole Galaxy / entire matrix could use this and I’d still somehow be born in the rebel territory
2 0 Reply
Huh. I thought it was logarithmic.
10 0 ReplyI thought it was electronic 🤷
5 0 Reply
Obviously coding has to be done in runic script or the magic doesn't work.
63 1 Replyᛖᛚᛞᛖᚱ ᚠᚢᚦᚨᚱᚲ ᚹᛁᛚᛚ ᚷᚢᛁᛞᛖ ᚦᛖ ᚲᛟᛞᛖ ᚨᚲᚱᛟᛊᛊ ᚦᛖ ᚹᛁᚱᛖᛊ
16 0 Reply
Mossad Agent using a secret language to hide a new version of Pegasus.
26 0 ReplyGotta say, Ai can be kinda neat:
# Assuming these are inputs num = int(input("Enter a number: ")) string_input = input("Enter a string: ") def process_data(data_list, number): result = "" if number == 2: for char in data_list: result += data_list[char] return result elif number == 1: result = data_list[number] for char in data_list: result += data_list[char] return result # Main function call output = process_data(list(string_input), num) print(output) # This seems like an external tool for copying to clipboard, e.g., pyperclip import pyperclip pyperclip.copy(output)
9 0 ReplyNeat for what? That doesn't look like the code above. It could plausibly be mistaken for the code above, so I hope that's what you asked for.
7 2 ReplyThey
turned the Galactic Script code into English code, probably via OCR and a "approximate this into English" prompt. Not sure if it's exactly the same tho (what 'main function call' was in the image?)Edit: It's only a facsimile, see Hoimo's reply
1 0 Reply
Oy vey…
38 1 ReplyOy vey...
Oy vey!? They said English, not russian. What the hell, man. Kids these days.
4 20 ReplyI'm pretty sure that "Oy wey" is Yiddish, not Russian.
9 0 Reply
Knew a fellow that was ridiculously good at hiding his tracks from the feds because he made a custom compiler so that he could code in Armenian.
25 3 Reply"This binary has strings of Armenian in it. Our suspect likely speaks Armenian"
-The feds, probably
2 0 ReplyHow does a custom compiler make it easier to hide your tracks from the feds?
33 0 ReplySounds like an episode of NCIS
23 0 ReplyHe forgot to mention, the compiler outputs Armenian machine code that can only run on chips built on Armenian binary.
10 0 Reply
lol its not even hebrew its finnish
7 17 ReplyWtf
11 0 Reply