Programming Language
Autor: claren • May 22, 2016 • Research Paper • 2,286 Words (10 Pages) • 738 Views
PAMANTASAN LUNGSOD NG PASIG
Alcalde Jose Street , Kapasigan , Pasig City
COLLEGE OF COMPUTER SCIENCE
A Technical Research
In
EN 104
Technical Writing
The Proponents
Estano, Jasper J.
Razon, Mhel Aldrin N.
Vila, James Brian I.
BSCS 2B
English Instructor
May 18, 2016
Table of Contents
- INTRODUCTION……………………………………………………………. Page 1
Problem ……………………………………………………………………Page 1
- DISCUSSION…………………………………………………………………Page 2
- CONCLUSION………………………………………………………………..Page
- REFERENCE.....................................................................................................Page
- INTRODUCTION
In our course we need to know what is the Most In demand or used Programming Language in some company, first there are many types of Programming Language and we can study them all but we cannot remember them all, and like in speaking there is a universal language so any one can understand what they are saying, but in Programming language there are Most used Programming language in one company so that all programmers can understand each other.
The In Demand Programming Language is a computer software used Programmer, users and others. It is available at the course in Computer Science. Many programming language that we can take and it will depend on your skills and how you settled quickly learn.
A program is a set of instructions that tell the computer to do various things; sometimes the instruction it has to perform depends on what happened when it performed a previous instruction. This section gives an overview of the two main ways in which you can give these instructions, or “commands” as they are usually called. One way uses an interpreter, the other a compiler. As human languages are too difficult for a computer to understand in an unambiguous way, commands are usually written in one or other languages specially designed for the purpose.
Programming languages can be roughly classified in two categories imperative and declarative. This classification, however, is not strict. It only means that some programming languages foster more naturally a particular way to develop programs. Imperative programming puts emphasis on how to do something while declarative programming expresses what is the solution to a given problem. Declarative Languages can be further divided into Functional andLogic languages. Functional Languages treat the computation as the evaluation of mathematical functions whereas Logic Languages treat the computation as axioms and derivation rules.
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