I learned BASIC, because it was the easiest high-level language to learn. From there, I learned Visual Basic, and now I am learning C++.
The past participle of "choose" is "chosen."
The past participle of "choose" is "chosen."
The past participle of the verb to choose is chosen.
infinitive: choose past: chose past participle: chosen
There's probably no single book that is best for all types of programming. Ideally you want the best books for your chosen languages. For C++ you should certainly own the latest edition of The C++ Programming Language by Bjarne Stroustrup. If there's a specific type of programming you wish to do, such as games programming, look for titles that deal with that specific subject.
Past tense forms are:"I chose..."and"I have chosen"( bothpronounced with a Z sound).
You can't just "make software". You have to know and understand thoroughly the purpose of the intended application, the programming language in which it is to be written, and how to install it on the intended computer. If you are sufficiently knowledgable on computors you may be able to teach yourself programming from text-books, provided your computer has the appropriate compliers etc. for the chosen language. Otherwise you'd probably have to undertake a formal course in programming.
It is "chosen".
choose is the base form of chosen and chose
It is chosen.
The Java Programming Language was originally named Oak because of an oak tree that stood outside one of the founders' office. It was then renamed to Green, and then renamed to Java because supposedly the creators of the Java Language consumed large amounts of Java coffee.
chosen