Turing is a complete esoteric language based on the Brainfack, but potentially much more extensible.
I do not like the popularity of the BF as a hard-to-read language, but I like the "mechanics".
BF hello World with loops
++++++++++[>+++++++>++++++++++>+++<<<-]>++.>+.+++++++..+++.>++.<<+++++++++++++++.>.+++.------.--------.>+.
Translated to Ter
incincincincincincincincincincninrhtincincincincincincincrhtincincincincincincincincincincrhtincincinclftlftlftdecbimrhtincincoutrhtincoutincincincincincincincoutoutincincincoutrhtincincoutlftlftincincincincincincincincincincincincincincincoutrhtoutincincincoutdecdecdecdecdecdecoutdecdecdecdecdecdecdecdecoutrhtincout
But Ter 0.0.3+ may
@HelloWorld!@psk
Launch interpreter and input code. Press Enter to run interpret.
Availability two (int32 and bool) registers for results some operations, pointer to save cell, stack, 35 new commands (includes math and logic operations from other languages).
- "Just for lulz" (c)
- Because this language is much easier to expand than the original BF, because the operation takes not one symbol, but three, on its basis you can create something interesting =)