no, first generation computers used vacuum tubes.
Machine Language (Vaccum Tube)
parental generation
2ng generation. It used transistors and magnetic core memory
Programming languages are divided into five different generations. A programming language consists of the symbols, letters and numbers used to communicate with computers.
Machine language is a first generation language.
pidgeon
There is no such thing as a fourth generation language. Machine code is the first generation (the native language of the computer). Assembly language is the second generation (low-level symbolic language). All high-level (abstract) languages are third-generation. Although some languages claim to be fourth-generation or even fifth-generation, they are meaningless terms used by marketing types that tell you nothing about a language's capability.
Machine codeAssembly LanguageFORTRANCOBOLetc.There were actually quite a few languages used in the first generation, but most were not standardized and often designed to solve special problems, not general purpose languages.
All first generation programs are written entirely in machine code. Assembly language is a second generation language. All high-level languages are third generation. There are no official 4th or 5th generation languages; they are terms used by marketing types to make it appear that the latest programming language is superior in some unspecified way. Languages are categorised by their capabilities and paradigms, not by some "generation" tag that has no actual meaning.
A first generation contact language is called a pigdin. The feature of human language that allows people to talk about the past and the future is referred to as displacement.
Third generation. All high level languages are third generation. Assembly language and low-level symbolic languages are second generation languages. Machine code is the only first generation language. Although some languages have been described as being fourth or fifth generation, the terms have no official meaning (they were originally used by marketing types but are in fact meaningless).
one's native language; the language learned by children and passed from one generation to the next.
Easier to learn: Second-generation programming languages are easier to learn than first-generation languages. They are closer to human language and are more intuitive
FIRST GENERATION
first generation computers
4 th generation language