Boolean Algebra is a type of math in which the values of the variables are true and false. The algebra is the basis for digital logic, computer programming and mathematical logic.
Boolean is a 'true or false' logic in programming - if you define a function as a Boolean function, the only inputs it can have are true or false, and the output will vary dependant on the input
The earliest computers were literally hardwired using logic gates that determined combinations of on/off values over various wires to determine the program. Even once programming moved from hardware to software, binary codes remained the basis of all programming languages.
Programming can apply a wide variety of branches of mathematics. Geometry, trigonometry, calculus, algebra etc. Computer science and math go hand in hand. +++ The actual computing at circuit level relies on binary and hexadecimal arithmetic, and Boolean Logic. Certain applications including I think graphics programming handle huge matrices for co-ordinate plotting etc.
George Boole suggested the similarity between logic and algebraic symbols. By tying logic to algebra, Boole allowed algebra to be viewed as purely abstract. The modern applications of Booleâ??s contributions to mathematics are: computer programming, electrical engineering, satellite pictures, telephone circuits and even Einstein's theory of relativity.
James H. Andrews has written: 'Logic Programming' -- subject(s): Automatic theorem proving, Logic programming, Programming languages (Electronic computers), Semantics 'Proof-Theoretic Characterisations of Logic Programming'
Isaac Balbin has written: 'Logic programming' -- subject(s): Bibliography, Logic programming
Akikazu Takeuchi has written: 'Parallel logic programming' -- subject(s): Parallel logic programming
Ladder logic is the programming scheme used when programming most control systems, such as robotic controllers. It's most common when programming a PLC (Programmable Logic Controller)
James Messinger has written: 'The logic and design of computer programs' -- subject(s): Logic programming, Computer programming
S. -H Nienhuys-Cheng has written: 'Foundations of inductive logic programming' -- subject(s): Logic programming, Induction (Logic), Machine learning
A. Voronkov has written: 'Logic Programming: First Russian Conference on Logic Programming, Irkutsk, Russia, September 14-18, 1990'
Your question is ambiguous.
anjum
Patrick van der Laag has written: 'An analysis of refinement operators in inductive logic programming' -- subject(s): Logic programming
Object-oriented programming (OOP) languages include features like classes, objects, encapsulation, inheritance, and polymorphism. Classes are blueprints for creating objects, encapsulation allows data hiding and protects data integrity, inheritance enables code reusability by allowing new classes to inherit attributes and behaviors from existing classes, and polymorphism allows objects of different classes to be treated as objects of a common superclass.
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