Emojicode: Difference between revisions

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Β Β  🏁 πŸ‡
Β Β  🏁 πŸ‡
Β Β  Β  🍦 input πŸ”·πŸ”‘πŸ˜― πŸ”€Ask something here?πŸ”€
Β Β  Β  🍦 input πŸ”·πŸ”‘πŸ˜― πŸ”€Ask something here?πŸ”€
Β Β  Β  πŸ˜€ input
Β Β  Β  πŸ˜€ πŸͺπŸ”€You said: πŸ”€ inputπŸͺ
Β Β  πŸ‰
Β Β  πŸ‰

Revision as of 15:01, 10 September 2017

Emojicode Workshop

About

Emojicode is an open-source, full-blown programming language consisting of emojis.

Workshop

Please note that lines that begin with $, should be executed with the Terminal and are NOT program syntax. This workshop also assumes you have completed the Emojiterm workshop. The $ should not be pasted in the terminal.

All other code blocks should be considered valid Emojicode syntax.

Create a file.

  $ πŸ“ myprog.emojic

The simplest Emojicode program looks as follows.

  🏁 πŸ‡
  πŸ‰

To save and exit the text editor (nanoπŸ“), first do Cntl+O, and then Cntl+X.

You can run it by first compiling it.

  $ emojicodec greeter.emojic

Running it.

  $ emojicode myprog.emojib

This program is so simple, it doesn't do anything.

The famous "Hello world!" example.

  🏁 πŸ‡
    πŸ˜€ πŸ”€Hello world!πŸ”€
  πŸ‰

User input.

  🏁 πŸ‡
    🍦 input πŸ”·πŸ”‘πŸ˜― πŸ”€Ask something here?πŸ”€
    πŸ˜€ πŸͺπŸ”€You said: πŸ”€ inputπŸͺ
  πŸ‰