Uyjhmn n

Uyjhmn n is a programming language that was written in Visual J# 2005 by Truttle1. (Why Visual J#? Well...why not?) Uyjhmn n was designed to annoy the user by combining verbose syntax with a terrible looking IDE that rushes the user. It was named after the gibberish that gets typed when you bang your head on the keyboard out of frustration.

IDE
All Uyjhmn n code must be written in the Uyjhmn n IDE. If you try to copy code from another IDE or a text file and paste it into the Uyjhmn n IDE, the IDE will simply close. The IDE features a white textbox where code is inputted. After the timer highlighted in cyan runs out, the top line of the white textbox is removed and it is added as a new line to the green textbox, which contains all previously typed code. The timer is then reset to 10 seconds. The text in the green textbox is in Webdings so you can't read it, and it is read only so you can't fix it. If the top line of the white textbox happens to be a bad command, it is not added to the green textbox, and the amount of time that the timer resets to gets divided by two to punish the user for writing an error. If the top line of the white textbox is empty, the program code currently in the green textbox is immediately interpreted. The IDE also features two radio buttons that do nothing, as well as a progress bar that constantly fills up and resets itself, but ultimately does nothing useful. Above the input box is a "JUST INTERPRET MY CODE ALREADY" button that allows you to quickly run your code at the expense of allowing you to copy it. Uyjhmn n code is displayed using a console that is built into the IDE.

NOTE
Even though PASTING CODE is disabled, you can still select and copy the code in the green textbox in case you want to use it later. (Even though you would need to re-type it)

Commands
Uyjhmn n features commands that are annoyingly verbose and usually don't fit in the tiny textbox you are allowed to use. They also need to be typed in all caps. Lowercase letters inside of square brackets (such as [a]) represent arguments that the user can specify.

Hello World
Here's a basic Hello World program. It outputs the phrase in all capital letters. PRINT THE CHARACTER WITH THE ASCII VALUE 72 PRINT THE CHARACTER WITH THE ASCII VALUE 69 PRINT THE CHARACTER WITH THE ASCII VALUE 76 PRINT THE CHARACTER WITH THE ASCII VALUE 76 PRINT THE CHARACTER WITH THE ASCII VALUE 79 PRINT THE CHARACTER WITH THE ASCII VALUE 32 PRINT THE CHARACTER WITH THE ASCII VALUE 87 PRINT THE CHARACTER WITH THE ASCII VALUE 79 PRINT THE CHARACTER WITH THE ASCII VALUE 82 PRINT THE CHARACTER WITH THE ASCII VALUE 76 PRINT THE CHARACTER WITH THE ASCII VALUE 68 PRINT THE CHARACTER WITH THE ASCII VALUE 33 END THIS PROGRAM

Video
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2_-D1GLEs-8

External Resources
IDE: https://www.dropbox.com/s/56gdd18n2j0912j/uyjhmn%20n.exe?dl=0

Java Interpreter (So you can use it on Mac, Linux, and Windows 10): https://github.com/TermerMC/jUyjhmn-n