PHP is a scripting language mostly used for web development. It is dynamically typed - variable type can change at runtime. You can use procedural or object-oriented approach in PHP and recent versions are adding elements of functional programming too (closures and yielding, for example.) There is no method overloading, but methods and functions can have optional parameters.
Java is strictly object-oriented, compiled to bytecode, and uses strong (statical) typing. Methods can be overloaded by declaring them with different argument types.
There are many differences in syntax as well, and the way environments for development and production are setup and maintained.
If you are trying to learn more general programming and more computer science stuff, you're better off with Python. Python's much easier to use, basics are almost the same however Java tends to be used in most applications, Python is cross platform and high level scripting language with support for GUI as well. One way to describe it is to call it a more rigid replacement of Perl And VB.
Hello my name is 5ynCK and I am pretty good with python.
Python was programed with a base language of C and was created to be a simple read language.
Although its commands are different (print instead of cout and such) python is still a great language. It relates to most non internet languages in the structure of it. Although it is a slow language (relatively) it still has a great way of redocing coding size.
Hope this helped.
Oracle is the company that owns Java and is partnered with Microsoft who owns Visual Basic.
Unfortunately, you can not use Visual Studio to edit Java. Visual Studio can be used to program: Visual Basic C# C++ ASP.NET Anyways to program Java you can use other programs as Eclipse for Java Developers
Java. While Visual Basic is certainly useful for writing Windows applications, that's all it can do. If you want the same program to run on other platforms (such as Linux), the entire program must be re-written from scratch. With Java, there is no need to convert. Once compiled, Java programs can be executed upon any platform that has a suitable Java virtual machine implementation, which is pretty much everything today.
No. Java takes some ideas from C++, so there are certain similarities, especially in the basic syntax. But it is a different language.
Yes!Visual Java plus plus and Java Builder is different from the Java language?
Oracle is the company that owns Java and is partnered with Microsoft who owns Visual Basic.
java is a server side programing where as visual basic is a client side programing(This programing Language is different from oops)
c,c++,b,BASIC,Python,Java,Visual C, Visual C++ and visual basic
Unfortunately, you can not use Visual Studio to edit Java. Visual Studio can be used to program: Visual Basic C# C++ ASP.NET Anyways to program Java you can use other programs as Eclipse for Java Developers
Java. While Visual Basic is certainly useful for writing Windows applications, that's all it can do. If you want the same program to run on other platforms (such as Linux), the entire program must be re-written from scratch. With Java, there is no need to convert. Once compiled, Java programs can be executed upon any platform that has a suitable Java virtual machine implementation, which is pretty much everything today.
* Java * C, C++ * Basic * COBOL * Fortran * Pascal * .Net * Visual Basic * etc...
No. Java takes some ideas from C++, so there are certain similarities, especially in the basic syntax. But it is a different language.
They are programmed in programming languages or scripting languages like Visual basic , c , c++,java , vb script or java script.
Yes!Visual Java plus plus and Java Builder is different from the Java language?
Most developers don't use visual basic for android devices because android does not support the .net framework and therefore cannot run visual basic applications. Developers usually use Java instead to program applications for android.
visual c++ probably, performance sensitive windows applications generally are made in it,
Mark Grand has written: 'Visual Basic design patterns' -- subject(s): BASIC (Computer program language), Computer Technology, Microsoft Visual BASIC, Nonfiction, OverDrive, Software patterns 'Java fundamental classes reference' -- subject(s): Java (Computer program language) 'Java Enterprise design patterns' -- subject(s): Java (Computer program language), Web servers, Object-oriented programming (Computer science), OverDrive, Computer Technology, Nonfiction 'Java language reference' -- subject(s): Java (Computer program language)