Alphab
        Alphab [ˈæl.feɪb] uses every latin alphabet letter. It was created in 2023.
        Syntax & structure
        
            - Every character has an assigned bit, which start out as zero when a program begins.
- Commands are seperated by whitespace (this will be done by spaces on this page, but any whitespace can do).
- There are four command layouts: all lowercase (flipif), first lowercase (print), first uppercase (jumpif), & all uppercase (query).
- All lowercase will flip the first's bit if the bits of the ones coming after are all 0 (it will always flip if no letters come after).
- First uppercase will jump by the first character's unicode value if the bits of the ones coming after are all 1 (it will always jump if no letters come after).
- If the jump letter has a diacritic, the jump is forewards, otherwise the jump is backwards.
- In all uppercase, the user can choose to flip every specified bit. Multiple letters are required for all uppercase. To flip one value, write it twice (i.e. "AA", "ÜÜ", etc.)
- In first lowercase, multiple letters are, once again, required. The bits are used to print a unicode character, if the first bit is 1. Later bits are higher powers of two.
In first lowercase, multiple letters are, once again, required. The bits are used to print a unicode character, if the first bit is 1. Later bits are higher powers of two.
        
        Useful code & basic programs
        Not a:
         a
        Set a to one:
         aa
        Set a to zero:
         aa a
        A or b on c:
         cc cab
        A and b on c (parentheses are for if you want to preserve a & b):
         cc a b c cab (a b)
        Hello world program:
         aa aBBBABBA aABABBAA aBBAABAA aBBAABAA aAAAABAA aBBBBBA aAAABAAA aAAAABAA aBABBAAA aBBAABAA aBBABBAA aABBBBA