Assignment operator
Object-oriented programming is a category of programming languages. On a larger scale, OOP would belong under the imperative programming paradigm.
The only example of a first generation language is machine code, the native language of the machine. Every type of machine has its own variant of machine code specific to that machine's architecture.
C++ is one of the most flexible programming-languages there is. So, my first answer would be 'Yes'. However the question is, if C++ is the most suited language for the software that you want to make. There may be a alternative, easier language, in wich you can develop your software. Jahewi :-)
There is no data type string in C. String is handled as an array of characters. To identify the end of the string, a null character is put. This is called a null terminated character array. So array of strings will be a double dimensioned array of chars. It is implemented as an array of pointers, each pointer pointing to an array of chars.
yadaw
Most European languages belong to the Indo-European language family.
programming language is of two type 1. procedural programming language 2.non procrdural programming language .. ----non procedural programming language means that which relates with the real world.. for example-oops oops is a non procedural programming language because it relates to the object and object relate to the natural or real world where as that languge which does not belong to the real world is known as procedural language
Most of the languages of the world do not belong on the European language tree, such as all of the indigenous languages of Asia Africa, Australia and the Americas. This would include Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Hebrew, Arabic, Cherokee, Navaho, etc. There are also some European languages that are not on the European language tree, such as Hungarian and Basque.
No, Semitic languages are not part of the Indo-European language family. Semitic languages belong to a separate language family that includes languages such as Arabic, Hebrew, and Amharic.
Almost all European languages belong to the Indo-European language family. This includes the Romance, Germanic, Slavic, and Celtic branches, among others. The second most prominent is the Uralic/Finno-Ugric family, which includes Finnish, Hungarian and Estonian as national languages as well as the Saami languages, Karelian, and many languages of Russia. The Basque language is a linguistic isolate, meaning that it does not appear to belong to any family. Maltese is an example of a European language of Semitic origin.
Georgian belongs to the Caucasian family of languages.
Azerbaijani and Iran language are different.The azerbaijani is a language belonging to the Turkic language family.The Iranian languages or Iranic languages belong to the Indo-European language family.
The vast majority of European languages belong to the Indo-European language family, although most of the languages along the Baltic (Finnish, Estonian...) and Hungarian belong to the Uralic language family.
There are 286 languages spoken in Europe and Russia, but they don't all belong to 3 language families.The three largest language families in Europe are (accounting for about 30 languages):SlavicItalicGermanic
They all belong to the Indo-European language group!
It belongs to the Indo-European family of languages.
The Badjao people speak multiple languages, including Sinama, Bajau, Tausug, Yakan, and Samal. These languages belong to the Sama-Bajaw language group, which is part of the Austronesian language family.