No
No. In order to make or use a program or a programming language, you need to know a programming language.
A compiler converts a program in one programming language into a program in another programming language. Often the conversion is into a language that can be understood directly by the hardware.
Yes, C is a common programming language.
Adobe Flash uses actionscript. It is the main programming language for flash.
No, COBOL is a programming language.
Because if we did not then it would be D programming
No you can't. SQL is not a programming language, so it doesn't create programs. It is a query language, and it creates queries. There is a difference. There are various things that programming languages have and that they can do, which would take a more detailed explanation to define. SQL is very limited in what it can do, being specifically designed to work with data and manipulate databases. It does not have the capabilities of a programming language. A query and a program are both a list of commands to do a task, but a program is far more extensive and can do far more things, and so it is very different to a query.
Prolog does not belong to any program, it is a programming language.
It is the most common programming language, but of course there are many others. It is one of the easiest computer programming.
Carl Feingold has written: 'Fundamentals of COBOL programming' -- subject(s): COBOL (Computer program language) 'RPG II programming' -- subject(s): RPG (Computer program language) 'Fundamentals of structured COBOL programming' -- subject(s): COBOL (Computer program language), Structured programming
program means set of statements.and coming to programming languages , the program which is developed in any language i.e c,c++,java etc
Bryan Meyers has written: 'Desktop guide to CL programming' -- subject(s): Job Control Language (Computer program language), Programming, IBM computers 'RPG IV jump start' -- subject(s): RPG IV (Computer program language) 'Control language programming for the AS/400' -- subject(s): IBM AS/400 (Computer), Programming, Job Control Language (Computer program language)