-
By Konrad Kuse, first high level programming language.
designed in 1943, made in 1998. -
Made by John Backus.
Stands for 'Formula Translation".
Made for processing mathematical
operations. -
the year the language was developed, the people who developed the language, the primary purpose of the language, and if the letters in the name are an acronym that stands for something more meaningful.
-
Made by Grace Hopper of Rand Corporation.
Developed from the A-0 compiler. -
Developed at MIT by John McCarthy for AI
research. -
Developed by: Created Howard Bromberg, Howard Discount, Vernon Reeves, Jean E. Sammet, William Selden, Gertrude Tierneyas a programming language
to be used by businesses. -
Report Program Generator
A language by IBM for use
on their systems. -
John George Kemeny and Thomas Eugene Kurtz at Dartmouth College
made to be more accesible to
users not in the field of science or mathematics. -
Wally Feurzeig, Seymour Papert, Cynthia Solomon
established at MIT, meant to be easy to learn but
flexible. -
Ken Thompson, with contributions from Dennis Ritchie
Created by Bell labs
for system programming. -
Made by Niklaus Wirth, intended
to be efficient and a good
language for learning the
concepts of programming. -
Served as the foundation for
later programming
languages (c++, C#) -
Robin Milner
Stands for "metalanguage", general
purpose language -
by IBM
Structured Query language
Used for database creation
and management. -
General purpose
programming language,
made by Bjarne
Stroustrup -
Designed collaboratively by many
groups for the Department of
Defense. -
Created by Microsoft to rival
other languages and
simplify application
programming. -
Guido van Rossum
Scripting Language, fast and flexible. -
used with many devices for many purposes, including web development, released by sun micro-systems.
-
Brendan Eich at Netscape
utilized in the development of web sites, not related to Java. -
Rasmus Lerdorf Server-side, Scripting language.
-
Anders Hejlsberg at Borland
Based on Pascal, similar concepts to Visual Basic.