And German, English, several easter European languages and a bad idea, IHMO.
It's like saying: Hey lets make a language out of Ruby, Python, Awk, Perl3, Perl4 and a little bit Perl5, throw in a good measure of BASIC, a bit Lisp, stir and puke. Oh you don't like it? Well, it's not going to change, you know. That's that. And good riddance.
janx | [reply] |
How can you create an artificial language not basing it on existing languages? You mean you would like something entirely new? Look how Perl is build - you have a bit of shell, a bit of C, a bit of awk and many other languages.
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That's all to well. Of course does artifcial mean to take something existing (conciously or unconciously).
But, IMHO there's more to a succesfull language/system than the sum of the parts. Almost every language has its strong points which others lack. What I mean is that you don't necessarily get a better language by combining the strong points.
One major success factor is the evolution of a language. It has to adapt to its users - and Esperanto IMHO doesn't do that.
I'm comfortable using English as the lingua franca in the technical world. I most often prefer it to my mother tongue German for clarity and simplicity. However I'm also aware that English has its roots (at least partly) in old germannic languages (Disclaimer: I'm no expert here - Input appreciated.) and thus is also based on other languages.
Well, from this point on I would repeat myself, as I just became aware of, but you get my point ;-)
janx
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