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Not a religion in classic terms,
but it have controlled and formed our lives the recent years.
With the AI, it kind of gained a soul of it own.
The history of programming languages spans from documentation of early
mechanical computers to modern tools for software development. Early programming
languages were highly specialized, relying on mathematical notation and
similarly obscure syntax. Throughout the 20th century, research in compiler
theory led to the creation of high-level programming languages, which use a more
accessible syntax to communicate instructions.
During 1842–1849, Ada Lovelace
translated the memoir of Italian mathematician Luigi Menabrea about Charles
Babbage's newest proposed machine: the Analytical Engine; she supplemented the
memoir with notes that specified in detail a method for calculating Bernoulli
numbers with the engine, recognized by most of historians as the world's first
published computer program.
Jacquard Looms and Charles Babbage's Difference Engine both were designed to
utilize punched cards, which would describe the sequence of operations that
their programmable machines should perform.
The first computer codes were specialized for their applications: e.g., Alonzo
Church was able to express the lambda calculus in a formulaic way and the Turing
machine was an abstraction of the operation of a tape-marking machine.
The first high-level programming language was Plankalkül, created by Konrad Zuse
between 1942 and 1945. The first high-level language to have an associated
compiler was created by Corrado Böhm in 1951, for his PhD thesis. The first
commercially available language was FORTRAN (FORmula TRANslation), developed in
1956 by a team led by John Backus at IBM.
It now controls most of our lives
in most parts of the world.

My Icon: A material Bitcoin, as a gathering of electrons were hard to come
bye. |