It's isomorphic, but you're right, I used an overly specific term. In any case, one can't conclude that something should be the way it is from the fact that it is the way it is without fruther premises, regardless of the kind of value judgements involved.
Implicit key premise seems to be that the more akin a formal (programming) language to it's users' natural one, the more ergonomic it is. I would not necessarily agree, but not read it as ought-from-is.