Hello World
The next program prints the Hello World message on the screen (std-out).
	see "Hello World"
Run the program
to run the program, save the code in a file, for example : hello.ring
then from the command line or terminal, run it using the ring interpreter
	ring hello.ring
Not Case-Sensitive
Since the Ring language is not case-sensitive, the same program can
be written in different styles
.. tip:: It's better to select one style and use it in all of the program source code
	SEE "Hello World"	See "Hello World"
 
Multi-Line literals
Using Ring we can write multi-line literal, see the next example
	See "
		Hello 
		Welcome to the Ring programming language
		How are you?
	    "Also you can use the nl constant to insert new line and you can use the + operator to concatenate strings
.. note:: nl value means a new line and the actual codes that represent a newline is different between operating systems
	See "Hello" + nl + "Welcome to the Ring programming language" + 
	    nl + "How are you?"
Getting Input
You can get the input from the user using the give command
	See "What is your name? "
	Give cName
	See "Hello " + cName
No Explicit End For Statements
You don't need to use ';' or press ENTER to separate statements.
The previous program can be written in one line.
	See "What is your name? " give cName see "Hello " + cName
Writing Comments
We can write one line comments and multi-lines comments
The comment starts with # or //
Multi-lines comments are written between /* and */
	/* 
		Program Name : My first program using Ring
		Date         : 2015.05.08
		Author       : Mahmoud Fayed
	*/
	See "What is your name? " 	# print message on screen
	give cName 			# get input from the user
	see "Hello " + cName		# say hello!
	// See "Bye!"
.. note:: Using // to comment a lines of code is just a code style.