Non-English-based programming languages

The concept of international-style programming languages was inspired by the work of British computer scientists Christopher Strachey, Peter Landin, and others.

ALGOL 68's standard document was published in numerous natural languages.

On December 20, 1968, the "Final Report" (MR 101) was adopted by the Working Group, then subsequently approved by the General Assembly of UNESCO's IFIP for publication.

Translations of the standard were made for Russian, German, French, Bulgarian, and then later Japanese.

Users can translate code files from one language into another using a string-based approach.

As of September 2024[update] it supports 47 different languages,[4] meaning its keywords can be typed in any of those.

Environment on GitHub OM Lang, OM Lang Android App[dead link‍] [19] Ceylonicus is an open-source, interpreted, and functional programming language designed to bridge the gap between English and Sinhala syntax within a unified codebase.

Ceylonicus is implemented in Python, and features a web-based environment, built using Brython.