Lots of programming languages were developed IN the US or BY US citizens, but there are no languages that were developed BY the US as a whole.
LISP programming refers to creating applications using LISP languages - a family of old high level programming languages that used Polish notation. LISP languages are the second oldest HLLs after FORTRAN.
yes
The oldest computer language is machine code and all computer languages are binary encoded. It's unavoidable on binary machines.
COBOL, Fortran C, C#, C++, Java Object C JavaScript Smalltalk Ada APL Lisp F# X++ Icon SPSS RPG Unix Shell script Perl ...
because..... thats what they did
Wikipedia currently lists 710 computer languages.
All languages are completely developed, but the exact number of them is unknown.
Although English is the dominant language of computer languages, this is primarily because a third of all known languages were developed in English-speaking countries, while languages developed in other countries typically use English in order to appeal to a wider audience. However, there are still many non-English programming languages, including symbolic languages, as well as conversions of English-based languages to suit non-English cultures. As to which languages are not used, it would be easier to list those that are or have been used. See related links, below.
It was developed many, many years ago.
ALGOL is a family of programming languages, developed in the 1950s, that was intensely influential on the development of algorithm description computer science.
Lots of programming languages were developed IN the US or BY US citizens, but there are no languages that were developed BY the US as a whole.
How many generations of computer languages have there been since the middle of the 20th century
Romance languages developed from Latin in Europe.
The European languages that developed from the Roman empire are Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, French and Romanian. There are also many Latin derived words in English.
Romance languages developed from the Latin language in Europe.
Employers who are looking to hire computer programmers are often looking for a combination of unique skills. Learning as many languages as possible across as many disciplines as possible can greatly help an individual to find a job. This means learning low-level computer languages as well as high-level languages, scripting language and languages that might be related to a specific career field. Learning computer languages that are not technically programming languages like a database query language or a language based around business calculations can be very valuable when searching for a position in those career fields.