(A) Basic (b) Turing (c) Java
Of these three choices, (B) Turing is not a programming language. Turing was a mathematician that defined the rules for a "complete" computer/programming language/etc. His contributions to computer programming included the definition for a "complete" language (one that could possibly simulate any real-world condition/environment/etc, irrespective of being able to run in real-time, just being able to calculate the state thereof), and defining two "comparable" machines, such that one machine can simulate another machine, and the second machine can also simulate the first. BASIC and Java are both programming languages.
Which of the following is not a computer programming language
ALGOL stands for Algorithmic Language and was a programming language popular in the 1950's
C is a structured programming language. PHP, COBOL is also a structured programming language. These languages follow a top down approach.
C got its name because it was a successor to the B programming language (to which it is very similar). The various iterations of ALGOL also had an influence on C.
FORTRAN, FORTH, C, BASIC, COBOL, LISP, LOGO, Pascal, and many more. Algol - Algorithmic Language SAIL - Stanford Artificial Intelligence Language BLISS - Basic Language for Implementation of System Software APL - A Programming Language SNOBOL - String Oriented Symbolic Language
FORTRAN is a third generation language.Note: I don't know what these generations are, but I'm quite sure that Fortran is one of the oldest high-level programming languages, as are Cobol and Algol.
Richard L. Sites has written: 'ALGOL W reference manual' -- subject(s): Computer programming, ALGOL (Computer program language)
ALGOL stands for Algorithmic Language and was a programming language popular in the 1950's
fortran, algol, cobol, pl/i, for example
ALGOL is a family of programming languages, developed in the 1950s, that was intensely influential on the development of algorithm description computer science.
For one, it never had been standardized, and no big software company (read: IBM) supported it.
C is a structured programming language. PHP, COBOL is also a structured programming language. These languages follow a top down approach.
It doesn't stand for anything. The 'C' language was developed as an improvement over its predecessor, which was called 'B'. (I'm not joking). The predecessor of 'B' was called 'BCPL', which was an initialism for "Basic Combined Programming Language". The ancestor of BCPL was CPL, and CPL was a descendant of ALGOL.
B. Ratcliff has written: 'Introducing ALGOL 68 and structured programming to non-computer science students as their first programming experience'
Vladimir Alekseevich Vasil'ev has written: 'IAzyk ALGOL-68' -- subject(s): ALGOL (Computer program language)
J. Bordier has written: 'Le langage de programmation Algol W' -- subject(s): ALGOL (Computer program language)
Theodorus Jozef Dekker has written: 'ALGOL 60 procedures in numerical algebra' -- subject(s): ALGOL (Computer program language) 'Evaluation of determinants, solution of systems of linear equations and matrix inversion' -- subject(s): Electronic data processing, Matrices, ALGOL (Computer program language), Mathematics
Alan Perlis was jointly responsible for creating the ALGOL programming language. He was awarded the Turing award in 1966 for his influence in the field of advanced programming techniques and compiler construction.