PlanoTse Handbook for Job Search Automation/PlanoTseScript Basic Syntax

Code Delimiters
When PlanoTse is asked to run, i.e. execute, a string or content of a file, it looks for opening and closing curly brackets. The opening brace '{' tells PlanoTse to start, and the closing brace '}' tells PlanoTse to stop interpreting the code between them. The code is expected to be in PlanoTseScript syntax. The string from the opening to the closing brace is together called a code block.

The place at which you can store, and from which you can execute a block of code in PlanoTseScript is called a springboard. You can include as many code blocks in a springboard as necessary.

Instruction Separation
Each PlanoTseScript instruction is called a statement. You need to use a semicolon to separate two consecutive statements.

No Comments
No comments are allowed in the code at this time. You must keep all comments outside of the code blocks.