The code may look like natural language, but it is really just regular computer code with different keywords. In your example, I want is probably somewhat synonymous with new. It's not like you can use natural language directly and say make me a window instead (and if you could do that, things would get even uglier...).
Lets take a close look at your code and the language implications:
i want window and the window title is Hello World.
i want is unnecessarily verbose for new, and denotes beginning of the argument list. the <typename> <member_name> is sets instance variable member_name on object being created.
i want button and button caption is Close.
and button name is btn1.
. ends statement. continuation of an argument list can happen in a new statement starting with and. button caption is syntactic sugar for button.caption
btn1 mouse click. instructions are
you close window
end of instructions
mouse click is a keyword containing a space, should be mouseClick. instructions are defines a lambda (see the is vs. are keyword confusion causing trouble yet?). you close window calls function window.close(). end of instructions is end of a lambda. All of these are far longer than they need to be.
Remember all that? And that's only my guesses at the syntax, many of which are probably wrong. Still seem simple? If so, try writing a larger program without breaking any of those rules, and the tons more you'll need to define things like conditional logic, loops, classes, generics, inheritance, or whatever else you'll need. All you're doing is changing the symbols in regular programming languages to 'natural language' that's harder to remember, more difficult to read, and less precise and efficient.
Try this translation:
var myWindow = new Window( title="Hello World" );
myWindow.addButton( new Button( caption="close", name="btn1" ) );
btn1.onMouseClick = function() {
myWindow.close();
}
See how each line maps to its counterpart in the previous example, but states the intent far more succinctly? Natural language may be good for execution by humans, but it is terribly difficult to group into a precise specification.
The more you try to make English communicate these ideas easily and clearly, the more its going to look like programming languages we already have. In short, programming languages are as close to natural language as we can get without losing clarity and simplicity. :D
I want a box called Hello World and a thing in it called Close and when I click it it vanishes.Which should do exactly the same thing. – Donal Fellows May 2 '10 at 8:13