-
Designed by Konrad Zuse, used for engineering purposes
-
Designed by John Backus, used for mathematical and scientific calculations
-
Designed by Remington Rand, used for mathematical equations
-
Designed by John McCarthy, used for general purposes and AI
-
Designed by Howard Bromberg and Vernon Reeves, used for business purposes, stands for Common Business Oriented Language
-
Designed by IBM, used for business purposes, stands for Report Program Generator
-
Designed by John Kemeny and Thomas Kurt, used for generals purpose, Beginner's All-purpose, Symbolic, Instruction Code
-
Designed by Wally Feurzeig and Cynthia Solomon, used for Graphics
-
Designed by Ken Thompson and Dennis Ritchie, used for non-numeric applications
-
Dennis Ritchie, general purpose use
-
Designed by Niklaus Wirth, used to encourage good programming practices
-
Designed by Robin Milner, used for general purposes, stands for Meta Language
-
Designed by Donald Chamberlain and Raymond Boyce, used for managing data, stands for Structured Query Language
-
Designed by Bjarne Stroustrup, used for fast and portable programs
-
Designed by Jean Lehbian and S. Tucker Tapt, used for general purposes
-
Designed by Guido Van Rossum, used for general purposes
-
Designed by Microsoft, used for system specific applications
-
Designed by Borland, used for IDE purposes
-
Designed by Ramsus Lerdorf, used for general purposes, stands for Hypertext Pre-Processor
-
Designed by James Gosling, used for general purposes
-
Designed by Brendan Eich, used for high level interpreted language