There is no such single language. It depends on application, programmer training, budget, and hundreds of other factors.
I prefer Ada, but I come from a safety critical avionics background. Other languages will probably be better in a less rigorous lower budget situation.
It depends on what you mean by suitable. Assembly language is generally the best in terms of performance, but C and C++ are more practical to use.
There is no such language. Many European language belongs to the family of Indo-European languages, but not everyone. And this fact has nothing to do with the computer software.
The software which can create other software is actually termed as language and most preferably computer language. Computer language like C, C++, C#, VISUAL BASIC, JAVA, etc, are very popular through which advanced softwares, games, mobile apps, etc are developed. You can buy MICROSOFT VISUAL STUDIO from the market to get started with.
Binary code is the computers language. For example you sent 300mb from Drive C:/user to D:/Data The computer could end up transalting this to numbers us 0's and 1's.
It's possible, but most likely it's written in a language similar to assembler. Problem is not to write software, problem is to compile in the code which can be understood by your car computer. Thus it's about compiler, not about the language you are using.
operating software is the software that basically runs your computer. it is the most important piece of software that is in your computer, and is like our brain.
Most likely, yes.
Operating System (OS) Software
The most popular software tool in both store bought or download is a type of antivirus software. This type of software can be used on any computer and is extremely important in protecting the computer and the user.
Computer programming and Computer software development?
There is (and always was) only one computer language: binary (also known as machine code). In order to create machine code programs, programmers use computer programming languages, both low-level and high-level (the level indicating the amount of abstraction between the source code and the resultant machine code). The most-used programming language today is Java, however it is only suitable for applications programming. The most-used general purpose language is C++.
Commercial software