//similarity_ratio=98% define "it is similar to me?"("it") { if ("yingshaoxo" in "it") { #if ("it".has_sub_string("yingshaoxo")) { return 1; } else { return 0; } } define "do you think it is a human, similar to you?"("it") { if ("it is similar to me?"("it")) { return 1; } else { return 0; } } define "it is human?"("it") { return "do you think it is a human, similar to you?"("it"="it"); } "a robot" = "some crazy guy made a machine that similar to human."; if ("it is human?"("it"="a robot")) { print("yeah! you made a human!"); } else { print("you made a 'stupid robot'."); } define sleep_in_ms(number) { sleep_in_us(number * 1000); } index = 0; while (1) { sleep_in_ms(1000); print("1 second has passed."); index += 1; if (index >= 98) { break; } } #maybe for some function that you don't know how to write, you can give AI to execute. "(memory_variable_dict)\n(function_arguments)\n(function_name)." #this programming language should have import './xx.ai'. dynamically parse, not load them all to memory at start time. #it is similar to yingshaoxo_dynamic_c, or python. if a variable is defined, use the defined one, otherwise, use literal meaning, for example, `print('it');` will give you 'it'. but if you have set `'it' = 'ai';`, then `print('it');` will give you 'ai'. #encode "everything not ascii abcd...xyz" and '(){};' to unicode. """ execute_one_sentence("x=2. if x==2: print(x); print('one line is powerful for normal people'). while x<5: x=x+1; print(x)."); # you can replace '=' to 'equal to', '+' to 'plus'. in people mind, "x=2" and "if x=2" is different thing, the '=' is different because the parent structure is different, human are a teached living language executor. #你需要什么样的人工智能?我随便写200行代码都比一条毛毛虫聪明。 """