I don't quite see the point of your question.
I see in this case it turns out that it is a language created by a college professor. I don't see any explanation of why he decided to create this language and give his students assignments in it, other than the speculation that it was so students couldn't find answers on the Internet, but that appears to just be speculation. It seems to me to be rather unproductive to teach students a language that they will never use outside the classroom, a lot of effort devoted to learning something they will never use, but without knowing more about the class and what the professor is trying to accomplish, I'm just speculating too.
There are lots of obscure languages out there created as experimental projects and the like. I'm sure there are plenty of languages in existence that I've never heard of.
I'm suddenly reminded that I once took a computer class that used the language CARDIAC. You've probably never heard of it. It was a super-simplified machine language with just 10 op-codes. The idea was that it was easier to learn than a real machine language, but would teach the basic principles. THEN you could go on to learn a real machine language.
So ... if someone asks a question about an obscure language that only 20 people in the world have ever used, I suppose the chance that he'll get an answer here is small. But so what? Do you want to not allow him to ask? Why not? I think the whole value of a site like this is that there is some hope of getting an answer to an obscure question. If there are 10 million people in the world who know the answer to a question, I can probably find it in some reference source, "Java for Beginners" or whatever. It's the obscure questions where you need experts who can say, Oh yeah, I came across that same weird problem once ...
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