About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 717. Chapters: APL programming language family, Ada programming language family, Algol programming language family, BASIC programming language family, C++ programming language family, C Sharp programming language family, C programming language family, FP programming language family, Forth programming language family, Fortran programming language family, Haskell programming language family, Icon programming language family, JOSS programming language family, JavaScript programming language family, Java programming language family, Lisp programming language family, Logo programming language family, ML programming language family, Modula programming language family, Oberon programming language family, PL/I programming language family, Pascal programming language family, Perl, Prolog programming language family, Python programming language, Ruby programming language, SETL programming language family, SNOBOL programming language family, SR programming language family, Smalltalk programming language family, Tcl programming language family, XBase programming language family, QuickBASIC, GW-BASIC, IBM BASICA, True BASIC, Applesoft BASIC, VBScript, Visual Basic for Applications, PureBasic, PowerBASIC, Blitz BASIC, Turing, Liberty BASIC, Tiny BASIC, AMOS, AutoLISP, Just another Perl hacker, Common Lisp, XBasic, BBC BASIC, ScriptBasic, Larry Wall, Emacs Lisp, Objective-C, Parrot virtual machine, VHDL, Yukihiro Matsumoto, Dylan, Squeak, Standard ML, Turbo Basic, Lisp Machine Lisp, CPAN, MOO, Cyclone, Godiva, Phoenix Object Basic, 2.PAK, Atari BASIC, Maclisp, MAD, Document Style Semantics and Specification Language, 51-FORTH, Small-C, Objective Caml, Clean, KL0, KL1, Rapira, ACL2, XLISP, PL/SQL, Microsoft BASIC, COMAL, Comparison of C Sharp and Java, List of MicroWorlds Logo commands, Oxygene, C Sharp syntax, ALGOL 68, Algorithmic skeleton, BS...