Cool stuff! Some random thoughts:<p>- APL comes to mind. As well as the classic <a href="http://www.eecg.toronto.edu/~jzhu/csc326/readings/iverson.pdf" rel="nofollow">http://www.eecg.toronto.edu/~jzhu/csc326/readings/iverson.pd...</a><p>- You might want to cross post to <a href="https://reddit.com/r/programminglanguages/" rel="nofollow">https://reddit.com/r/programminglanguages/</a>.<p>- I like how you have a subreddit.<p>- I'm a little confused about how to view the source. The GitHub seems to just be a website. Is there a folder I should be looking at?<p>- You might want to educate people near the top on how to quickly enter symbols (control+command+spacebar on Mac OS X). I find unless a programmer is familiar with that, they are quickly turned off by symbolic languages.
My take: it certainly looks interesting, and I congratulate you on building it.<p>That said, since I use a standard US keyboard, the requirement to use symbols I can't easily type would prevent me from building anything with it.
I think adding about a sentence as soon as possible on the landing page that explains your language in more specific, formal terms would be helpful. "Ji enables literate programming and is good at x."<p>Maybe a quick example that shows how easily I can do some non-trivial task would be nice, "here is how Ji lets you multiply matrices or something."
> <i>Ji (pronounced gee)</i><p>The "g" in "pronounced gee" obfuscates your intent. Use IPA if you want to clarify pronunciation.