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In the morning time, while watcing news snippets in DD news shows that AIR invited applications for sanskrit learned person to translate famous Hindi songs into Sanskrit and then those songs to be sing in same melody of original songs. It is the new trend as I have never ever hard about this before.


http://mohanmekap.com/

It is stated by some members that Sanskrit is used to program certain computer languages. I remember reading a few years back that Sanskrit is suitable for it. But have not come across it being actually used . I would appreciate to know which computer language is using Sanskrit logic. It would be fantastic to know of an ancient language helping an modern application language. 

 

It is best for programming of artificial coding. Computer able to best to recognise programming structure and the best according to some like Briggs Sanskrit is the best or most suitable due to its logical structure of semantics.  Computer works in the concept of array where scattered data time and again recompiled to create systematic semantics, and in Sanskrit sentence structure exactly goes in such way and in each sentence each word has stipulated meaning on certain conditionality which never changes and that is most liked by computer who uses programming language to understand expression of statements. I found this link in internet from Google about this...

http://think.denverdias.com/2015/01/18/sanskrit-computer-programming/

 


http://mohanmekap.com/

Thank you said by: vijay

I'm in total agreement with you. Your link is not being highlighted. Anyhow I'm giving you the same link.

People who doubt who doubt Sanskrit as a computer language should go through this link.

http://think.denverdias.com/2015/01/18/sanskrit-computer-programming/

 

 

 

Thank you said by: mohan manohar
chinmoymukherjee wrote:

In none of my posts I have advocated the cause of this language as a spoken language despite its extraordinarily rich vocabulary it can't be the lingua franca like English. The reasons are clear. As to the small number of people who visited this planet to reform and break fresh and new paths and vision my only question is : When did we have them in thousands

and millions unlike today when we have more leaders than followers!!!!

Although I in favor of promotion of Sanskrit, but it is almost impossible to use this as a spoken language and medium of study. But we must be learn it. 

 

anil wrote:
chinmoymukherjee wrote:

In none of my posts I have advocated the cause of this language as a spoken language despite its extraordinarily rich vocabulary it can't be the lingua franca like English. The reasons are clear. As to the small number of people who visited this planet to reform and break fresh and new paths and vision my only question is : When did we have them in thousands

and millions unlike today when we have more leaders than followers!!!!

Although I in favor of promotion of Sanskrit, but it is almost impossible to use this as a spoken language and medium of study. But we must be learn it. 

Although impracticable, I challenge the Sanskrit enthusiasts to publish a Sanskrit daily-paper or internet edition and run this at least for a month. 

 

 


G. K. Ajmani Tax consultant
http://gkajmani-mystraythoughts.blogspot.com/

The link provided by mohan manohar should be gone through by all but especially by emotionally charged supporters of Sanskrit. The author states that computer languages have to be logical for obvious reasons. A study of existing languages has shown that Sanskrit is very near to logic in languages especially the positioning of the words which mean the same thing at particular positions although the word may be same. The second language with this property is Latin. Sanskrit is not used as a computer language as is claimed bu some members in the forum. Also the article reinforces the widely held factual view that it is a difficult language to learn and was not a language of the masses. Therefore a rishi here and a reformer there learning the language does not alter this fact. It ie very well known that reformists and rishis are always handful on this planet and elsewhere, just like Gandhi and Netaji will be once in thousands of years. What has that got to do with Sanskrit is not clear. Supporters of Samskrit should become realistic and not use emotion and adjectives without substance. This is doing a disservice to the cause of Sanskrit. Nobody including me doubts the greatness of Sanskrit. I also want it to remain alive. The issue got into debate when it was said that it will replace today's languages.

Gulshan Kumar Ajmani wrote:
anil wrote:
chinmoymukherjee wrote:

In none of my posts I have advocated the cause of this language as a spoken language despite its extraordinarily rich vocabulary it can't be the lingua franca like English. The reasons are clear. As to the small number of people who visited this planet to reform and break fresh and new paths and vision my only question is : When did we have them in thousands

and millions unlike today when we have more leaders than followers!!!!

Although I in favor of promotion of Sanskrit, but it is almost impossible to use this as a spoken language and medium of study. But we must be learn it. 

Although impracticable, I challenge the Sanskrit enthusiasts to publish a Sanskrit daily-paper or internet edition and run this at least for a month. 

Sudharma is a Sanskrit news paper from the city of Mysore Karnataka since 1970.

Here is the link

http://sudharma.epapertoday.com/

I'm a Sanskrit lover. I can run such Sanskrit news paper if someone fiances me.

 

 

 

 

rambabu wrote:
Gulshan Kumar Ajmani wrote:
anil wrote:
chinmoymukherjee wrote:

In none of my posts I have advocated the cause of this language as a spoken language despite its extraordinarily rich vocabulary it can't be the lingua franca like English. The reasons are clear. As to the small number of people who visited this planet to reform and break fresh and new paths and vision my only question is : When did we have them in thousands

and millions unlike today when we have more leaders than followers!!!!

Although I in favor of promotion of Sanskrit, but it is almost impossible to use this as a spoken language and medium of study. But we must be learn it. 

Although impracticable, I challenge the Sanskrit enthusiasts to publish a Sanskrit daily-paper or internet edition and run this at least for a month. 

Sudharma is a Sanskrit news paper from the city of Mysore Karnataka since 1970.

Here is the link

http://sudharma.epapertoday.com/

I'm a Sanskrit lover. I can run such Sanskrit news paper if someone fiances me.

Please write this on Facebook or Twitter so that financiers can know your proposal. I am sure nobody in India is going to start a Sanskrit newspaper or even a web site. However I hope you may begin with a website or blog. However I don't know how capable you are in Sanskrit- speaking, writing or reading. 

 

 

 

 

 


G. K. Ajmani Tax consultant
http://gkajmani-mystraythoughts.blogspot.com/

Gulshan Kumar Ajmani wrote:
rambabu wrote:
Gulshan Kumar Ajmani wrote:
anil wrote:
chinmoymukherjee wrote:

In none of my posts I have advocated the cause of this language as a spoken language despite its extraordinarily rich vocabulary it can't be the lingua franca like English. The reasons are clear. As to the small number of people who visited this planet to reform and break fresh and new paths and vision my only question is : When did we have them in thousands

and millions unlike today when we have more leaders than followers!!!!

Although I in favor of promotion of Sanskrit, but it is almost impossible to use this as a spoken language and medium of study. But we must be learn it. 

Although impracticable, I challenge the Sanskrit enthusiasts to publish a Sanskrit daily-paper or internet edition and run this at least for a month. 

Sudharma is a Sanskrit news paper from the city of Mysore Karnataka since 1970.

Here is the link

http://sudharma.epapertoday.com/

I'm a Sanskrit lover. I can run such Sanskrit news paper if someone fiances me.

Please write this on Facebook or Twitter so that financiers can know your proposal. I am sure nobody in India is going to start a Sanskrit newspaper or even a web site. However I hope you may begin with a website or blog. However I don't know how capable you are in Sanskrit- speaking, writing or reading. 

 Why I should write in FB or twitter, when i have my own team of Sanskrit scholars who are ready to offer their services free of cost ?

 

 

 

 

 

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