|
Viral Upadhyay wrote: 31 programming language per month ???
i don't think any body remember it (at least not i ).
i thought someone want to make us laugh ..
|
|
|
|
|
shinevpaul wrote: i thought someone want to make us laugh ..
I did
|
|
|
|
|
In my dreams probably...
Thanks
Md. Marufuzzaman
Don't forget to click [Vote] / [Good Answer] on the post(s) that helped you.
I will not say I have failed 1000 times; I will say that I have discovered 1000 ways that can cause failure – Thomas Edison.
|
|
|
|
|
It's the 31+ flavors of VB.
|
|
|
|
|
|
shinevpaul wrote: Can you guess what are the 31 programming language do they regularly use?
My guess is that it's VB'ers that think that every new function they write is a new programming language.
Marc
Will work for food.
Interacx
I'm not overthinking the problem, I just felt like I needed a small, unimportant, uninteresting rant! - Martin Hart Turner
|
|
|
|
|
Seriously? Who the hell is using over 31 languages a month? I'm not sure my poor little brain could cope
|
|
|
|
|
My God, It's unbelievable !
SuperMan?
|
|
|
|
|
8 votes for 31+, it means only 8 genius visiting Code Project regularly
|
|
|
|
|
what are the languages that you use to show somthing in a browser?
if html is not a language send me a link form a page that only use classic programing languages!
To me all code generate by humans used by machines use "programing languages", and i can generate a page only using html.
You can discuss if is imperative, object orinted, declarative, ... , but is alwyas a programing language.
|
|
|
|
|
So the escape sequences for controlling a VT100 are a language as well?
A text file is actually a program that tells a printer what marks to make on a page?
|
|
|
|
|
I don't consider javascript a real language, but I can understand why some people say it is a language.
But, for me HTML will never be a programming language. It can be a layout language, but not a programming one. So, it is a language, but has nothing to do with programming.
|
|
|
|
|
Javascript may be classified as a domain-specific language and/or a scripting language, but it's still a programming language.
|
|
|
|
|
You are right. You could write some code in C++ which shows a foramtted text or write a HTML snippet of code which does the same, but C++ is an imperative language and HTML and even XML are declarative languages, and voters could count them as programming languages.
|
|
|
|
|
It's gotta have the ability to perform some algorithm. This means logic structures like "if", loops, decision making. HTML has none of that. You can't write a program in HTML. You need a programming language to do that, not a layout or formatting language.
Sure, HTML is a language, but not a programming language. To have logic in a web page, you have to use JavaScript to make it "do stuff" (with a few, small exceptions with CSS maybe). Otherwise, it just sits there, looking pretty.
Same is true for XML. It's a data language, not a programming language.
The poll is about programming languages, not all computer languages, which knocks out a considerable amount of languages from consideration in this specific poll.
My "monthly" programming languages:
- C#
- VB.NET
- Write stored procs in MS SQL and Oracle SQL (I could count those as 2 languages, but I don't).
- JavaScript
I could have counted the following if the poll was about computer languages:
- HTML
- XML
- CSS
- Plain SQL (just writing queries, not stored procs)
So, even though I use 8 languages every month, only 4 of those are programming languages, so my vote in the poll was "4-5". I was also careful not to count the many languages I've used over the years and the new languages I'm experimenting with, because I don't use them currently on a regular, monthly basis. I think some people have counted every language they've ever written a line of code for in their life (whether or not it was a programming language or not).
But, HTML is not a programming language by any stretch of the imagination. That's a mistake that some newbs make, but not experienced developers.
|
|
|
|
|
I use C# and C++
Rarely use C
So therefore... To C or not to C
|
|
|
|
|
I use C# mainly, but there has few other also. Like VB6/VBA, ASP.Net with C#, SQL, ActionScript, Java Script and very rarely VB.Net also.
Suman
|
|
|
|
|
C++ , C# , SQL and VHDL give me all I need. I hadn't taken SQL into account so I selected 3, though.
EDIT: I also use Befunge for advanced parallel processing from time to time, but it is not on the Wikipedia's listing. What an unfairness...
Greetings - Jacek
|
|
|
|
|
The most popular choice is 4 to 5? Really? I use just one, C#, and SQL but that doesn't count.
I would have thought most people would be the same. Are you sure you're not just showing off?
Regards,
Rob Philpott.
|
|
|
|
|
T-SQL was listed as a language, so that's 2. I regularly use just C# and T-SQL as well.
|
|
|
|
|
Rob Philpott wrote: I would have thought most people would be the same. Are you sure you're not just showing off?
Depends on what you do, really. At my previous job I was regularly using:
C++ for server-side code
VBA for the MS Word client side (yes, our client app was MS Word )
Javascript - for browser scripts
plus non-programming languages such as HTML, XML, SQL...
Occasionally, I was also using some C# for automated tests and reading some Python code.
Nowdays it is mostly C++ plus occasionally some Perl.
|
|
|
|
|
Given that in the course of a normal week I use or have to work with C#, VB.net, JavaScript, T-SQL, PL-SQL for just web development I am not surprised to see 4 to 5 being the most popular.
In my case it is actually higher as I work with systems that are written in VBScript (as well as an derivative of ECMAScript) and even develop on 4D databases using its internal language.
As to SQL not counting, that is correct but the procedural based extensions do count. <attempts to dodge incoming flames>
|
|
|
|
|
I want to know who uses 31 or more!
Mark D. Collins
|
|
|
|
|
What's more there are 4 of these idiot voters so far
|
|
|
|
|
SQL is a programming language. It may not be general-purpose or Turing complete, but, in my opinion, that doesn't matter.
|
|
|
|