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+ 2

What is the oldest oldest language in coding?

Everything comes from somewhere.

4th May 2017, 9:42 PM
Steve Williams Jr.
Steve Williams Jr. - avatar
6 Answers
+ 5
Vacuum tubes! The first computers -as in, the ones that were the size of a warehouse- used vacuum tubes to dictate a 1 or a 0. Fun fact, this is where the term "bugs" come from; moths would literally get trapped inside the tubes and cause issues. Of course, there were techincally ancient "computing devices", and "programmable" things that were computers in concept, but really, not what you're talking about. Before there were so many fancy and fun programming languages, they literally "coded" in 1s and 0s. If you're talking about actual languages, you could consider Ada to be among the pioneers of programming. Ada was really only ever used for military calculations, though! Beyond that, mostly businesses had computers; not people at home. This is where you have languages such as Fortran and COBOL. Then, you could consider them multi-purpose, functioning languages. By the way, great question.
5th May 2017, 12:50 AM
Keto Z
Keto Z - avatar
+ 2
Morse signs. Or punch cards.
4th May 2017, 9:46 PM
Thanh Le
Thanh Le - avatar
+ 2
i seriously thought it was B
5th May 2017, 12:24 AM
Krishneel Nair
Krishneel Nair - avatar
+ 2
Abacus
5th May 2017, 1:30 AM
Calviղ
Calviղ - avatar
+ 1
Lisp? Im not sure , to be honest
4th May 2017, 10:55 PM
Bernardo Freitas
Bernardo Freitas - avatar
0
Earlier computing used different technologies, such as - cogwheels (Difference engine) - metal sheets (Zuse Z1) - relais (Zuse Z3) - vacuum tubes (ENIAC) But the first real high-level programming language probably was Plankalkül, developed by Konrad Zuse.
5th May 2017, 4:57 AM
Klaus-Dieter Warzecha
Klaus-Dieter Warzecha - avatar