Kudos for a “Mind blowing” video on Sanskrutam, we’ve barely scratched the surface of this great mother of all languages. Not sure why they’re not teaching more like English at all levels. Hopefully the future generations consider this greatest asset as their own and hold onto it with reverence. Thank you 🙏🏽
Why would they teach like English ? No body talks in Sanskrit in their day to day life. But people speaks English in a very wide range. Languages are their only for communication purpose, nothing more. Languages are not for bragging, sir. The end goal of language is communication, not for feeling proud. Tell me with whome would you communicate in Sanskrit language ? And yes, they teach Sanskrit in school, which is compulsory, atleast in my state.
There are people who talk in Sanskrit in their day to day life. There are institutions like Samskrita Bharati where one can learn to converse in simple Sanskrit, to say the least. I've seen a boy of about 5 years speaking to his father in Sanskrit. On asking the father said that they spoke in that language at home. He works at Samskrita Bharati, Bangalore. And languages are used for bragging also! 🙂
@@arnoygayen1984 only someone with limited brain can think that *languages are only for communication purpose* even after watching this video. Or perhaps you didn't watch the video. Either way, it shows lesser intelligence.
@@PrabhuIynanda other than a few enthusiasts and some religious figures who need it to execute the work they do, there's not much interest in the language. It is essentially dead today. The easiest language to get started with in programming is English. Why? Because, the most compatible input character set today is ASCII and the latin alphabet fits perfectly into max 128 codepoints that the ASCII standard supports. Today, even though there's a new standard in UTF-8 which supports millions of codepoints (including the devanagari script) and which has been in use for a while now, nearly all devices still support ASCII. This is probably why Japanese programmer Yukihiro Matsumoto (Matz) chose English as the syntactic language for the programming language he created called 'Ruby', even though he was Japanese. The languge chosen for a programming language is only useful for the placeholder tokens it provides for the compiler, which will strip all of it out when creating a binary for a target system. It doesn't have to be English. Theoretically, someone could make a language that uses devanagari characters for syntax, but that's really re-inventing the wheel. Why would you do that when a more compatible character set exists? That effort is better spent elsewhere.
The Shloka for the Knight's tour as shown in the video is by Vedanta Deshika and works for a 4x8 board, hence the grid-code and syllales don't match as it is for a 8x8 board.
I come from a software engineering background, I would love to collaborate with a Sanskrit pandit to explore the possibilities of creating a Large language model using this mysterious language!
With very less research done in this field I cannot say much about use of sanskrit for writing softwares. But I am highly sceptical of that, instead use of sanskrit in machine learning looks much more promising.
पूरी दुनियां में एक ही सत्य धर्म है, सनातन धर्म . सभी देशों में खुदाई में सिर्फ मंदिर ही मिलते हैं, कोई चर्च या मस्जिद नहीं मिलती क्यूंकि सबसे पुराना और सत्य धर्म एक ही है सनातन धर्म. सनातन धर्म की जय 🙏
The mantras are a DEVA ( देव) ware like computer runs a software...if you know it ...and how to execute it.. you dont have to compile...it directly goes for execution 😊
Hi Sir, Amazing video as always. Where did you learn Samskrutham? I am from Tamil Nadu. I donot know hindi or samskrutham. But I would like to learn Samskrutham. Is there any good source?
हिन्दुओं के पतन का कारण: 1. हम दो हमारे दो (~1990) 2. हम दो हमारा एक (~2000) 3. हम दो हमारा कुत्ता और बिल्ली (~2011) 4. केवल हम दो (~2021) 5. केवल मैं और कोई नहीं (passion वाले) जो समाज अपनी संख्या तक नहीं बढ़ा सकता उसको क्यूँ कोई राजनीतिक दल महत्व देगी!!! जोकतंत्र में तो संख्या महत्व रखती हैं!!! भारत की कुल जनसंख्या में मुस्लिम आबादी 2001 में 13.4% थी जो 10 साल बाद बढ़कर 14.2% हो गई। वहीं, इस एक दशक में हिंदुओं कुल जनसंख्या में आबादी 80.45% से घटकर 79.8% हो गई। 2021 की जनसंख्या का census तो हुआ ही नही ...या जान-बूझकर किया नहीं???गांव से शहर घूमने आए, किसान ने क्या खूब लिखा.! चिंता वहां भी थी, चिंता यहां भी है.! गांव में तो केवल, "फसलें" ही खराब हो रही थीं.! शहर में तो, "नस्लें" खराब हो रही हैं.! जो समाज kashmir_files से नहीं जागा वो क्या kerala story से जागेगा??? सोये हुए को जगाया जा सकता है परंतु सोने का ढोंग करने वालों को कैसे जगाएंगे ??? Ucfug7 vivigig7 vivuvu 0:32 0:32 0:33
आजकल लड़की वाले की एक शर्त होती है लड़के की कोई अविवाहित बहन न होना। लड़का शादी के योग्य होते हुए भी पहले अपने सभी बहनों की शादी करता है। इस चक्कर में इसकी शादी की उम्र 32 हो जाती है। जरा ध्यान दे, जब से महिला सशक्तिकरण हुआ है तब से 1-2 बच्चे वाली बीमारी, सिंगल फैमिली, लव जिहाद, लिव इन, तलाक, झूठे घरेलू हिंसा केस बढ़े है। हिंदुओं का कहना है कि 2 से ज्यादा बच्चा होने पर सही परवरिश हो नहीं पाती। समझ नहीं आता कि हिन्दू कौन सी परवरिश कर रहा है। मुल्ले 8-10 पैदा करता है उसे डॉक्टर, इंजीनियर, IAS भी बना रहा है। हिंदुओं के बिजनेस पर कब्जा कर रहा है। हिन्दू की लड़की भी पटा रहा है। और हिन्दू 1-2 पैदा करता है। उसे पिज्जा समोसा खिलाता है। खाने में सब्जी रोटी, पतली दाल खिलाता है। बच्चे को शारीरिक रूप से कमजोर और बीमार बनाता है। 95 % से ज्यादा आत्महत्या हिन्दू ही करता है। पढ़ाई पर 20 लाख खर्च कराकर बच्चे को चपरासी को जॉब दिलाता है। बेटियो को सेकुlलर बनाता है, टिlकटोक पर नचवाता है, मुल्lलो के lव जिlहाद में फसाता है, बाद में घर बहन बेटी छोड़कर भागता है (कश्मीर, केरल, हरियाणा का मेवात, बंगाल, राजस्थान के कई जिले, दिल्ली के कई इलाके आदि) मुसलlमानों को पंचरवाला कहना बस अपनी कमजोरी छिपाने का एक तरीका है। फर्नीचर बरेली और सहारनपुर का, पीतल मुरादाबाद, चीनी मिट्टी खुर्जा, चमड़ा कानपुर और आगरा का, चूड़ी फिरोजाबाद, कालीन भदोही का लगभग सारे कुटीर उद्योग पर उसका कब्जा है। ऑटोमोबाइल, बिजली मिस्त्री, कपड़ा, फुटवियर, कंस्ट्रक्शन, कांट्रेक्टर, हथियार की फैक्ट्री, केमिकल, एसिड, पटाखा की फैक्ट्री, वर्कशॉप, लोहा, लकड़ी, कबाड़ी, डेरी, फल सब्जी की मंडी, और सारे पुश्तैनी काम पर।कब्जा कर लिया है। और हिन्दुओ ने क्या किया ? 1-2 बच्चे पैदा कर खुद को कमजोर किया। बिना लड़े दूसरे को शासक बना दिया। 25 लाख खर्च कर 20,000 की इंजिनीरिंग जॉब, वकील बन कर झक मारो, कॉल सेंटर में टीम लीडर की गाली, गार्ड, चपरासी, बैंक क्लर्क, स्टेनोग्राफर, सफाईकर्मी मतलब कोई भी छोटा मोटा जॉब मिल जाये बस। फिर उसके बाद औकात से बहुत ज्यादा शान का दिखावा
@@ritesh.prakash bhai jo kaabil hoga wo to paisa chaapega na, aur khud ka bijiness kholega jaisa tumhare upar wale ka kehna hai naki govt mein jaayega kam hote jo niswarth kaam krte - just for the sake of doing it.
Why do u always want Government to do something? Why can't hindus be like our muslim brothers ... Becoming sickular will only hurt our civilizational interests ...
We just need the create the need for Sanskritam and give people a reason to learn this magnificent language. Your videos makes me more considerate towards my history. As an engineer I understand the quantum of making a coding Platform using Sanskrit as base language, it will revolutionize the way we see AI and computing.
I'm just making Programing language in hindi, the language will be compiled staticlly type language like golang open source and i have no idea about quantum computer.
As far as I understand Computer Science, We have following set of problems, NP, P, NP-complete, and NP-Hard problems. It is the logics which solve the problems. If the logic to the problem is same, it doesn't matter what programming language you use to write your program, its performance will remain same for high number of n inputs whether you write in English, Hebrew, URDU etc.
Your content, research and presentation is brilliant. Every video on every subject delves deep into the details and clarifies many aspects on that topic. Sanatana Dharma and India need more people like you. Many Pranams 🙏🏼 Keep it up
I'm a neuromorphics researcher (basically making computers that mimic the human brain), sorry to break this to you but none of this matters, computers (transistors) are binary 1s or 0s. A simple compression is using base 16 instead of base 10 for numbers but, they're still stored as binary data. It is rather trivial to compare lengths of sentences to determine which language is better, would we call mandarin or hieroglyphs better than french or english? The human language used wouldn't matter at all, everything is still binary. This video is poorly researched at best, misinformed at worst.
Exactly. Electronic devices only understand binary. Programming languages are used for communicating with compilers, not electronic devices. Compilers help us to communicate with electronic devices.
Chat gpt can talk in sanskrit..i checked..if we need to re introduce sanskrit..islam needs arabic, christianity needs english..hindu culture needs sanskrit
We Indians are quick in assuming things and presenting as facts without knowing more details. For example, we hear in ads and also people think that just because a medicine is sold as ayurvedic, side effects are impossible. About Sanskrit, if it is true that meaning of a statement in Sanskrit won't have ambiguity and changing the order of words does not change the sentence meaning, then it becomes easy for AI/machine learning algorithms to process human speech. Which can also mean that humans can give lengthy complex commands in Sanskrit, and compilers and interpreters should be able to convert to executable machine code.
Progarms are not written in natural language. They written using specific tokens (if, else, while, for, switch, case) that are terse and unambiguous and support the kind of complexity needed to write a general program. Sanskrit, I doubt, will fare better than English there. It doesn't matter what language or script the token is in, as long as the compiler understands what they are.
Most video contains generic statements. Please make small videos based on individual topics. Only those who have zero knowledge will think this is a great video, otherwise they was nothing that added to human knowledge. Maybe since presentation was good, it was needed for feeble minded but please don't click bait for those who already have basic understanding and knowledge of the topic.
Any language can be used for programming. As long as it has a grammar, it would work well. Programming languages are only understood by the compilers. Not Electronic devices. Electronic devices only know 1 language, and that's 'Binary' (The mathematical language of 0's and 1's), or simply put, computers only understand 'on' and 'off'. 1 means on. 0 means off. Sanskrit isn't a special case here. Mathematics is the language of Electronics.
@@12440jayjay I m learning the language but I find that there is lack of content for sanskrit on the internet in terms of ease of learning. As I wanted to know exact pronunciations of some sanskrit words but I was unable to find. Is there any apps or sites for the same?
@@aman4805 it is not good business. only few people are interested in it. however the few poeple who are interestd in it might make you beleive that the whole world is interested in it 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Thank you for this enlightening video. Alas, over the years we have lost the "beauty" of Sanskrit language. With the development of our ancient knowledge, we also had this medium of communication developed to its greatest glory and we need to revive this. As from time to time, people like you are digging up these gems from the depth of this ancient language, I am sure there is more to this.
Believe it or not, I had come up with the quantum physics concepts based on studies of Upanishads myself. Only when I discussed the concepts with my colleague, I heard the word quantum physics for the first time.
i need to learn how to present my thoughts and information that well because that is the number one thing while debating. i also need to learn how to do proper research without giving up in the middle and getting tied to worldly desires.
Programming languages like C/C++, Java, Python, etc., are designed to be understood and written by humans. However, computers can only interpret and execute instructions in binary. Therefore, a compiler is used to convert the human-readable programming code into binary that the computer can understand and execute. The choice of using English in programming languages is primarily due to its widespread understanding and ease of use by programmers.
this honestly is just a waste of time & money! Sanskrit was never the language of common people, it was the language of the elite, one of the primary reason that it died out. Having pride in your history & culture is one thing but propagating things which would just cost more in terms of effort & money is downright idiotic! In today's time, there's no point in propagating the revival of a dead language, it's just like if the western world suddenly start using the Latin! I read sanskrit in school till 10th, kept studying the language till my mid 20's out of interest but other than theoretical learning, sanskrit has no scope in modern society, you would require to spend million & billion of dollars to teach the language to any prospective student (irrespective of the age) We should spend money on training & upskill the current generation using the global language & tech in demand rather than playing folly to pointless agendas! Ps, the video is well researched and made objectively; I'm calling out the people who blindly propagate wastage of time & effort on this pointless pursuit
"you would require to spend million & billion of dollars to teach the language to any prospective student (irrespective of the age)" where do you live? I spent Rs.3000 for Level 1 Sanskrit, now I can read it fluently and understand easy texts in Sanskrit. When I complete my next level, which also cost the same amount, I would be more proficient to understand Sanskrit plays and Literature (of course for understanding the nuances of the language I would need help). There are institutes in India where the beginner level online costs as little as Rs. 500.
I have very limited knowledge when compared with you guys. I have programmed in Clipper , studied Unix & C and worked with Oracle. Even then I feel that first requirement is a compiler to convert Sanskrit words to Machine Language. If that is done new programmers can work on it and improve. Best wishes to all of you Bharaatheeyas
Well, one more important point: Not just coding but using software for data storage and communication, e.g. search engine would be just miles ahead if using Sanskrit. unambiguous sentences, well designed grammar would just make any search way more precise and way faster. this is huge if you understand how Sanskrit and its grammar works.
The problem in understanding Sanskrit is the main drawback. Human minds work well with simplicity and the reason why people prefer python rather than C despite being order of magnitudes slower and inefficient
@@pajeet_slayer A simple search engine splits your sentence (called query) into words and engine searches through its database for those given words and ranks the results according to some parameters (like popularity, connection to other websites... Etc). In recent years, these engines use AI to even account for spelling/grammar mistakes, semantics, your approximate location and browsing history to give better results. I've been programming for 3 years and using Sanskrit for coding is off to me. Fun fact is :in JS (and some other languages) you can use most of utf-8 characters as variable/function names. So code like: 𝚟𝚊𝚛 अंख = 𝟹; 𝚕𝚎𝚝 ഹരണം = സംഖ്യ => സംഖ്യ / अंख; ഹരണം(𝟹) Is a valid code. But you can see, it looks a bit awkward
it really doesn't matter. . computers don't speak sanskritam or any other language they don't even speak English.. modern day computers only understand 1 & 0. and coming to programming language.. it is a convenience for humans to understand put something meaningful as a program that later a compiler converts into byte code..
People will downvote me but this is very pointless. Most keyboards type in English we dont have good sanskrit keyboard. This also doesnt make a better programming language due to being the same to the compiler
What is the problem of using english , this may not be a hoax but is surely of very less worth, english is a language which more or less all of the world understands , and it is one of the very basic reason for which people have so easily got the hold of software programming, why should we induce sanskrit in it ? If it was sign language or any other form of communication system that could have helped the differently abled population , it could have been called effective and worth of investing some time . Moreover it is based of the previous software development annotations that means nothing has been developed or changed.
Well, I am not an engineer or an expert, But in past I have worked on a game, It was a "time passs" project but we used Sanskrit to write the variables and components names, this was it was hard to be stolen since we worked on a college computer, So basically, the game was not pure Sanskrit but the scripts were,
Common misconception people have is that sanskrit, english or whatever language is directly being read by the computer which is wrong the computer only understands numbers. But the cool thing about sanskrit which be very interesting to explore is its generative and algorithmic nature so there might some very cool tricks we can do to better optimize the code that we write
My dear....... even you have a misconception. The computer does not understand numbers, it only understands the ON or OFF state which for our understanding is represented by 1 or 0. hence the term binary.
@@MondayMorning-yv7nf Exactly, actually what I meant by 'understanding numbers' is that a combination of binary states and be interpreted as numbers. So I wouldn't say its a misconception because its so fundamental when in use.
@@MondayMorning-yv7nf what do you mean? There is conversion the number in memory is going to be in binary. What you typed as 1, 2, 3.. are unicode/ascii characters which are again a number
None said impossible. They need to redrawn and remapp everything from rhe beginning from scratch, which will be never accepted tp international standards. Making a programming language is respect to a specific language is not a new concept cuz, China, and Japan have such . But not possible with Sanskrit. Hardly 1% population speaks that. Then also no one recognises it
It's not a hoax. Any language can be used for programming. Programming is the human method of communicating with compilers. Electronic devices don't understand it. Electronic devices only understand Binary (1, 0/On, Off). Any language can be used in constructing a programming language.
The examples you gave could be easily done without using Sanskrit. I want to know if Sanskrit is able to do something other languages can't. Is there any feature of language which makes Sanskrit more desirable for programming?
Nothing man its just Indians trying to tell why their culture is great for the 100th time and me being and indian Am fed up of this One is Educating someone about their History and the other is Forcing it man it almost feels like Propaganda at this point The schools trys to make you love your culture by forcing it on you but all it did is made me hate it even more
And as always thanks for uploading a 'Doc Film'... Although there were nuances and a different point of view regarding Sanskrit as a language... However it sounded repetitive at times.... Sir, sorry for being rude always... But our hopes with you work has gone so high, the expectations have sky rocketed.... Still i am, and i will always be a die hard fan... UD...
And what are these expectations? I hope you are not expecting him to develop a programming language based on Sanskrit. His work is to analyse the Sanskrit literature and make it available for everyone. It is the duty of viewers to propagate them and create new things based on them.
You are giving references of your RU-vid videos, for that you should add RU-vid cards or 'i' button on your videos like this to increase engagements in those videos, that will also help viewers, Just for a Suggestion.
TLDR: Sanskrit, with its linguistic and mathematical properties, has the potential to be a powerful language for coding and solving complex problems in computational linguistics. 1. 00:00 📝 Writing software in Sanskrit is not possible as it lacks the scientific and mathematical potential required for programming, despite its linguistic properties being similar to English. 1.1 Sanskrit can be used for computer programming by replacing English keywords with Sanskrit words while maintaining the same functions. 1.2 Writing software in Sanskrit is not possible as it lacks the scientific and mathematical potential required for programming, despite its linguistic properties being similar to English. 2. 02:13 📚 The knight's tour problem on a chessboard was solved by a 9th-century poet using a grid of vowels and consonants in Sanskrit, showcasing the algorithmic nature of the language. 2.1 The knight's tour on a chessboard, where a knight visits each square only once, is a complex mathematical problem solved by a 9th-century Kashmiri poet named Rudrata. 2.2 The speaker explains how a grid of vowels and consonants in Sanskrit can be used as a lookup table to create verses that represent the path of a knight on a chessboard, demonstrating the algorithmic nature of Sanskrit. 3. 04:17 📚 The Sanskrit language has an alphanumeric system called akshara sankya that can represent astronomically high numbers using letters and words, with Aryabhatta creating a numerical system in Sanskrit that allows for the direct representation of numbers through a one-to-one mapping between letters and numerals. 3.1 The Sanskrit language has an alphanumeric system called akshara sankya that can represent astronomically high numbers using letters and words. 3.2 Aryabhatta created a numerical system in Sanskrit by assigning powers of 10 to vowels and consonants, allowing for the direct representation of numbers through a one-to-one mapping between letters and numerals. 4. 06:33 📝 Sanskrit's aphoristic nature and strong alphanumerical system make it a powerful language for coding and describing complex concepts like gravitational force, as demonstrated by Aryabhatta's codification of the sine wave. 4.1 Aryabhatta codified the sine wave in Sanskrit, which demonstrates the strong alphanumerical system and aphoristic nature of the language. 4.2 Sanskrit has an aphoristic nature that allows for condensing large meanings into short formats, making it a powerful language for coding and describing concepts like gravitational force. 5. 09:17 🧠 The Chanda sastram, a rhythmic template in Sanskrit, allows people in Vedic cultures to memorize tons of slokums without the need for books. 6. 10:28 🔍 Sanskrit is a sophisticated language with mathematical properties, making it potentially suitable for writing software, although it is unclear if it has been done before. 6.1 Sanskrit has mathematically and rhythmically aligned properties, a comprehensive and generative grammar, and has influenced many languages, making it suitable for creating new words and meanings within its framework. 6.2 Sanskrit is a highly sophisticated and scientific language with five scientific and mathematical properties, including etymology, grammar, and rhythm, and while it is unclear if writing software in Sanskrit is true or a hoax, there is evidence of computational technology within the language. 7. 12:57 📝 Computational linguistics is highly relevant for Sanskrit, and certain properties of the language could potentially help solve modern-day problems in the field. 8. 13:54 🤔 Start your research on the great language of Sanskrit, use your intellect to experiment and find out if it's truly great or just propaganda.
one of the biggest problem is that no one knows sanskrit and this chandas sashtra is very powerful for ai, i will definitely make project using chandas sashtra
Do you people also maintain your information in the form of articles? would like to read these as well. Videos are nice, but written articles would be an excellent addition.
The knights tour problem has been solved by rudrata. But the shloka u have mentioned in this video is not by rudrata, this shloka is from padukasahasram by sri vedanta desikan. Please research about this
The real strength of Sanskritam lies in its structure. Case suffixes expressing relation of words with the verb or another word are combined with the word itself. This makes it condensed. E.g. Vali was killed by Rama by an arrow vs. रामेण बाणेन हतो वाली | Moreover, compounding (समास) adds another level of brevity!
Object oriented languages are pretty close to the structure of Sanskrit. Encapsulation is a common thing in both Sanskrit and OOPS. Now if you want to write a language in devanagri, then yes.
Your discussion of sanskratm property regarding alphanumeric encoding is arbitrary. Even in english i can encode the numbers with letters and say ae ah ba for 15 18 21 there's nothing special about that