* Java * C, C++ * Basic * COBOL * Fortran * Pascal * .Net * Visual Basic * etc...
programing ---- programing ----
The most well-known programming languages are C, C++, C#, CSS, HTML, Javascript, PHP, Pascal/Delphi, Prolog, Python, Ruby, Visual Basic, and Visual Basic .NET, java.
when you compute any problem in the math you follow some particular rule or instruction to improve and correct computation , similarly in programing we also do same , our programing skill is modified e.g. we use the shortest path problem in math. if we want to develop the same program then we have to knowlege about how to solve this.....
Ruby, Python, Perl
Yes, there is a list of non-Indo-European languages. Some examples include Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Arabic, Hebrew, Swahili, Turkish, Tamil, Hausa, and Finnish. There are many more non-Indo-European languages spoken around the world.
The major Romance languages are: French, Portuguese, Spanish, Italian, Romanian, Occitan, and Catalan.
It is common to write exponential functions using the carat (^), which means "raised to the power". Computer programing uses the ^ sign, as do some calculators. In some programming languages such as Python, two multiplication symbols, **, may represent exponents
There are no truly "dead" languages being used in daily communication, as by definition they are no longer spoken. However, languages like Latin and Ancient Greek are studied and used in specific contexts such as academia, religious ceremonies, and cultural events. These languages are considered "classical" rather than dead as they still serve a purpose in certain settings.
Technically no... HTTP can be translated into HTTPS. Flash and Java can be converted into HTML5. Those are programing languages. As far as application level protocols, NO.
There is a long list of txt language words. Some include, but are not limited to, the following: LOL (Laugh Out Loud), IMO (In My Opinion), and ILY (I Love You).
There are Thousands of known dead languages. Here is a partial list, in no particular order:Ancient MacedonianBulgarDalmatianDacianIllyrianLemnianLiburnianPaeonianOld Church SlavonicEteocretanEteocypriotPannonian RomancePechenegPelasgianÅ?okacThracianYevanicAequianCamunicElymianEtruscanFaliscanJudæo-PiedmonteseLatinLeponticLigurianLombardicMessapianOscanPaleo-SardinianRaetianSicanianSicelSicilian ArabicUmbrianVeneticVestinianVolscianJudaeo-AragoneseJudaeo-CatalanJudaeo-Portuguese
There are more than 500 languages in West Africa, but the most widely spoken are:EnglishArabicFrenchSwahiliAnswerThere are several languages spoken in West Africa and it is hard to pin down the main dialect. However, the highest percentage of people speaking a common language is 10 percent; the language being Swahili.Fula, Maninka, Susu, Arabic, Insula, Kissi, Kpele, and LomaSome major languages from Europe are spoken there, such as English, Spanish, Portugeuse and French. Some of these are official languages of some countries. However there are hundreds of other languages in the countries of western Africa, too many to list. Some might be associated just with a small area or group of tribes.Yoruba, Igbo and Fula.