diff --git a/Hello-World.md b/Hello-World.md index d0f5000..62b1c9f 100644 --- a/Hello-World.md +++ b/Hello-World.md @@ -1,4 +1,3 @@ -# [hello.pla](https://github.com/dschmenk/PLASMA/blob/master/src/samplesrc/hello.pla) This is probably the simplest PLASMA program you can write: ``` include "inc/cmdsys.plh" @@ -6,4 +5,6 @@ include "inc/cmdsys.plh" puts("Hello, world.\n") done ``` -However, it is significant in that it demonstrates the basic layout of a PLASMA source file. Almost all PLASMA files will have `include "inc/cmdsys.plh"` at the beginning. All PLASMA files have to end with a `done` line. There could be more text afterwards, but it will be ignored by the compiler. Potentially a good place to put some documentation of the above code. And in the middle, we have a function call to put a string to the screen. The screen has an embedded carriage-return at the end, formatted like you would see in a C language style string, escaped with a `\` character. \ No newline at end of file +However, it is significant in that it demonstrates the basic layout of a PLASMA source file. Almost all PLASMA files will have `include "inc/cmdsys.plh"` at the beginning. All PLASMA files have to end with a `done` line. There could be more text afterwards, but it will be ignored by the compiler. Potentially a good place to put some documentation of the above code. And in the middle, we have a function call to put a string to the screen. The screen has an embedded carriage-return at the end, formatted like you would see in a C language style string, escaped with a `\` character. + +# [hello.pla](https://github.com/dschmenk/PLASMA/blob/master/src/samplesrc/hello.pla)