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Developed by Konrad Zuse
For engineering purposes -
Developed by John Backus.
Abbreviation of "Formula Translation"
General-Purpose Language -
Developed by Remmington Rand
Used to program math problems -
Developed by John McCarthy
Means "List Processing"
Used for Artificial Intelligence Programming -
Developed by Grace Hopper.
Means "Common Business Oriented Language"
Used for business purposes -
Developed by IBM
Means "Report Program Generator"
Used as a report-writing tool -
Developed by John G. Kemeny and Thomas E. Kurtz
Stands for "Beginners All-Purpose Symbolic Instruction Code"
Is used for business and general use. Made for entry level programmers. -
Developed by Wally Feurzeig, Cynthia Solomon, and Seymour Papert.
Used to create visual images -
Developed by Ken Thompson and Dennis Ritchie
Used for system programming -
Developed by Niklaus Wirth
It is now used to teach programming techniques -
Developed by Dennis Ritchie
General-Purpose Language -
Developed by Robin Milner
Means "Meta Language"
General-Purpose Language -
Developed by Raymond Boyce and Donald Chamberlin
Means "Structured Query Language"
Used to store, query, and manipulate data -
Developed by Bjarne Stroustrup
Means "increment C by 1"
Provides control over hardware and allows for faster coding than C -
Developed by Dr. Jean Ichbiah and team.
General-Purpose Languages -
Developed by Guido van Rossum
General-Purpose Language -
Developed by Alan Cooper.
Allows users to create visual objects (such as graphs) -
Developed by Borland (Now known as the Embarcadero Company)
Uses rapid application development -
Developed by James Gosling
Used to make web applications -
Developed by Brendan Eich
Can be used to create websites -
Developed by Rasmus Lerdorf.
Means "Hypertext Preprocessor"
Used to create applications