No
There is no difference between procedural programing language & structure programing language.
programming language is of two type 1. procedural programming language 2.non procrdural programming language .. ----non procedural programming language means that which relates with the real world.. for example-oops oops is a non procedural programming language because it relates to the object and object relate to the natural or real world where as that languge which does not belong to the real world is known as procedural language
it is a load of rubbrish
The two primary methods of programming are procedural and object-oriented.
By itself, structured programming does not support the notion of a function call. This is achieved through an extension of structured programming known as procedural programming. Object-oriented programming extends procedural programming such that data and the functions that operate upon the data can be encapsulated within an object.
By itself, structured programming does not support the notion of a function call. This is achieved through an extension of structured programming known as procedural programming. Object-oriented programming extends procedural programming such that data and the functions that operate upon the data can be encapsulated within an object.
C is a weakly typed procedural programming language. For object oriented programming languages near C, you can look at ooc ( http://ooc-lang.org/ ), C++, D, and Java.
No.Its purely object oriented programming language
example of procedural programming are those programming language that have structure e.g basic,fortran,c++,c and pascal e.t.c
Popular one is C.
Procedural programming is when an application executes a series of procedures. In procedural programming, the user is unable to choose what the program does next. In OOP (Object oriented), the user can click on any button they want, but in procedural, it just executed the pre-set procedures, then ends.
programming used to develop software applications ,they focus on the procedural style of processing systems