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> They kinda recognize the shape of words, or they go by icons. They don't actually know the meaning of anything.

That's kind of true of a lot of English computer users too.

But more to the point, what you are advocating for is translating the interface. Which I think nobody is against, and which is a common thing to do (at least for countries people care about, which sadly excludes a lot of the poorer parts of the world). The username prompt should read "username" in Pakistani. That doesn't automatically mean it has to accept non-ascii input too, as long as you accept unicode in the display name.

> Developers must be able to develop in their own language.

I learned coding in Pascal before I learned that "if" is an English word. English helps, but in the end keywords in programming languages and shell commands are only mnemonics. Knowing the translation helps but isn't necessary. What's important are documentation, tutorials and other resources in a language the developer understands.



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