2.1 KiB
2.1 KiB
Getting Started
Requirements
- Python 3.9 or later
- A language pack (
pip install foreignthon-xx)
Installation
pip install foreignthon
For global CLI access across projects, use pipx:
pipx install foreignthon
Create a project
fpy new myproject --lang <code>
cd myproject
This scaffolds:
myproject/
├── .foreignthon.toml # project config
├── .gitignore
├── README.md
└── src/
└── main.<lang>.py # hello world in your language
The .foreignthon.toml stores your language and any local pack overrides:
[foreignthon]
lang = "es"
# custom_pack = "custom.json"
File naming
ForeignThon detects the language from the file extension:
script.es.py → Spanish
script.ta.py → Tamil
script.fr.py → French
You can also declare the language at the top of the file:
# foreignthon: es
Or override it at runtime:
fpy run script.py --lang es
Run
fpy run src/main.es.py
Compile
fpy compile src/main.es.py
# → src/main.compiled.py
fpy compile src/main.es.py -o dist/
# → dist/main.compiled.py
The compiled file is standard Python. Commit it alongside your source — anyone can run it without ForeignThon installed.
Validate
fpy check src/main.es.py
# ✓ main.es.py looks good.
Checks syntax without running — useful in CI.
Errors
When something goes wrong, ForeignThon shows the error in your language first, then English:
[ES] ErrorDeDivisionCero: Error división por cero
[EN] ZeroDivisionError: division by zero
File "src/main.es.py", line 8
Tracebacks point to your original source file, not any intermediate.
Variable names
Variable names are completely optional — English names work alongside foreign keywords with no issues. Only keywords and builtins are ever swapped.
Next steps
- CLI Reference — all commands and flags
- Language Packs — available languages
- Custom Packs — extend or override a pack locally