Fun project to experiment with learning language design.
VSCode Extension for syntax highlighting (WIP).
Description: Prints out a message to the console.
Args: Message String
bark("Hello World!")~ Description: Plus equals an amount to a int variable.
Args: Int variable, Amount Int
owo currency equaws 10~ paw(^currency, 5)~ // Prints out 15 bark(^currency) Description: Sleeps the main thread.
Args: Seconds Int
// Sleeps for 5 seconds sweep(5)~ Description: Unregisters a variable.
Args: Variable name
// Unregisters the value for 'testValue' ono testValue equaws 5~ bite(^testValue)~ Description: Prompts the user with a question for a response
Args: Question String
owo name equaws pwompt("Enter your name:")~ bark("Your name is ^name.")~ Description: Parses a JSON string into a object
Args: JSON String
owo json equaws pawsejson("{"userId": 1, "name": "John"}")~ bark(^json)~ Description: Issues a web request and returns back a String
Args: URL String
ono webText equaws fetch("https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com/todos/1")~ bark(^webText)~ Description: Downloads a file to a path
Args: URL String and Path String
stash("https://i.imgur.com/NuUoA9Z.jpeg", "./output/forest.jpeg")~ bark("Downloaded forest.jpeg to output dir!")~ You can create an empty script and run FurScript code against it. Run can return a value if a return is hit in the FurScript code. This example would return 10.
from script import Script code = '''ono newNumber equaws 5+5~\n nudges ^newNumber~''' script = Script() print(str(script.run(code)))