he/she devolop it in 1666
COBOL was developed in 1959 by a consortium called CODASYL.
Rear Admiral Grace Hopper
Grace Hopper did not make COBOL, but she was technical consultant upon the committee and influential in its design following her work on the FLOW-MATIC language, which was combined with ideas from the IBM equivalent, COMTRAN. COBOL was first released in 1959.
COBOL was originally designed by Grace Hopper and is on of the oldest programming languages. The name stands for Common Business Orientated Language. More information can be found at websites such as Wikipedia.
fortran language,basic language,cobol language.
She was one of the first programmers of the Harvard Mark 1 and she developed the first compiler for a computer programming language. She developed COBOL the first independent programming language.
COBOL was developed in 1959 by a consortium called CODASYL.
Dr. Grace Hopper developed COBOL (Common Business-Oriented Language) in the late 1950s, with its first specifications being published in 1960. The language was created to address the need for a standardized programming language that could be used for business applications across different computer systems. Hopper's contributions were instrumental in the design and implementation of COBOL, which became one of the first high-level programming languages widely used in business computing.
Bjarne Stroustrup began developing the C++ programming language 1979. Dennis Ritchie developed the C programming language in 1972. Rear Admiral Grace Murray Hopper developed the first compiler for a computer programming language in the 1950s, which later led to the development of COBOL.
FLOW-MATIC, which led to COBOL.
She developed the first compiler (A-zero) and was responsible for the creation of the programming language, COBOL (COmmon Business Oriented Language).She later helped develop the UNIVAC computer.
No, COBOL is a programming language.
Admiral Grace Hopper.
You have answered your own question: it is a programming language.
Computer programming language.
No, it is a high-level programming language.
As Ada Lovelace is often credited as the first computer programmer (in 1843, by the way) it would seem fair to credit Charles Babbage's Analytical Engine as the first machine for which a programming language was developed. That said, modern third generation programming languages weren't invented until Grace Murray Hopper designed COBOL in 1959. COBOL was not developed on any machine. It was specified to be machine independent and was simultaneously developed for both IBM and RCA computers in 1960.