My english teacher made my class watch this video to learn about programming languages, but then she asked us what 4chan was. I'll just say that she said we needed to censor that detail and move on and we had a good laugh. Thank you for that
In 1991 engineering school, we had to learn FORTRAN. It was awful - syntax hell on old green-screen terminals and tractor-fed printers in the computer lab. Then, the final week, our professor walked us through a comparison with C. It was like night and day. I was like, “Why did we waste an entire semester learning this archaic crap?!!!”
@@timgrei1730 Object Pascal is a way better language under the hood than C/C++ that dominates the industry. What an irony, but it is what it is. Congrats to your school by the way.
7:23 Minecraft: Bedrock Edition (which is played on consoles, tablets, smartphones, and Windows 10) is in fact written in C++. It performs much better on lower-powered hardware, compared to the original Java-based Minecraft.
C# was not directly derived from C++. C# was developed from scratch by Anders Hejlsberg at Microsoft, taking the best features of several languages: C, J++, and Turbo Pascal (amongst others). The original code name was COOL - C-like Object Oriented Language. It’s easy to come up to speed with if you’re familiar with any of the Java/C languages*. It’s also the language of choice for Unity game programming. Cheers! *(not JavaScript, which is a completely different animal)
You forget APL and PL/1 : they were once the two most used by IBM, the first for interactive accounting the second as a coalescence of COBOL, FORTRAN and ALGOL that was supposed to replace them all.
I watched several videos on the history of programming languages, and I am surprised that none of them mentioned a language called Prolog. Prolog was excellent in the field of medical diagnostics, and other AI applications that required significant man-machine interface.
This is dope but I was wondering how they put the algorithm on the computer. Like how Tf did someone start saudering metal into a board than from there start typing on the pc? I know this is noobie but this baffles me
Just like to mention the UCSD Pascal P-Code system 1977 that I first came across the virtual machine to run code compiled to the p-code standard. I was Computer Science student at University of Manchester in 1981. One of our term assignments was to write a p-code interpreter for a simple concurrent process programming language. I think USCD Pascal became Borland Turbo Pascal & C++ products in the following years, as the embedded compiler/ linker directives were identical to those I had been using at university
Our professor assigned to us a homework to summarize your clip. Although, it is a 15+ minutes to watch, but it takes more than one hour to watch, listen and summarize "The Brief History of Programming Languages". To be honest, till the mid of the clip, I had feeling of hate towards you! Later on, when I reached the end, also I felt so relieve, I recognized how massive the effort you spent to summarize the history. So, thank you so much and I liked it :) Cheers!
Hahaha well I'm glad you don't hate me! Ya it was probably the video that took me the absolute longest to make and I wasn't great at video editing at the time! But I'm glad you liked it and hopefully the homework wasn't too bad!
But still no one questions the fact why they don’t teach the source knowledge in which these multiple languages derive from🧐IBM I’m coming for you✨🧚🏾♀️
Thanks for the corrections at the end of the video. That helps! I would've been walking around not knowing what I was talking about. I had to go over sections of this video several times because of the confusion. I didn't know if you were joking about something or not and so paid extra attention. I don't get the British thing but whatever. Nothing wrong with making something fun I guess. I learned some things today is what counts.
I'm curious why you omitted PL/I and RUST. Another minor, but very different language, was FORTH. Also a widely used language in the manufacturing sector i gcode; although it is rarely programmed directly anymore but is generated by CAD/CAM systems.
Ha ha to the English accent at the end - not bad, but sounds more Australian! I don't get involved in new languages and client side frameworks anymore, I just got fed up with investing so much time only for them to go out of fashion a few years later, security holes, and breaking changes in newer versions requiring a rewrite to fix them.
One thing tho @marselluh, i actually found some contradictive statements. Some say FORTRAN was the first programming language and some say it was Assembly. Why do you consider assembly ?
guess what language this is: var iNum1 , iProd : integer; iNum1 := 5; iProd := iNum1 * 10; redOutput.Lines.Add('Answer: ' + IntToStr(iProd)); heres a hint of the language: rad
What about Frege's set theory -> the algorithms (remember Euclid) -> Church's Lambda Calculus. Changing code on the fly was pioneered by Lisp not Smalltalk... Also Haskell is mainly used for programming language research, finance, and writing compilers, its not used for math at all...
Thanks for the extra info! Though on Haskell’s website it does say that it’s rising in popularity for mathematicians (at the time) wiki.haskell.org/Haskell_and_mathematics
No love for ADA language?!?!? The most widely used language in all defense institutions around the world because of it's safety levels and embedded software capabilities, developed in 1980. I believe ADA deserves an honorary mention on a future addendum video.
I’m not super familiar on the program, I just know that’s you’d act as an ambassador for the Jacobs school of engineering if you were an IDEA scholar. I’d probably check out the UCSD website or email the Jacobs school of engineering for more information! Hope this helps!
@@ByteOfMichael they will probably take the course online this time. But I am not sure how will they manage to teach ece online. Moreover, I cannot apply for it as they have removed it momentarily. Anyway, how easy is it to become an IDEA scholar
I don’t know anyone who is currently an IDEA scholar so I’m not sure how hard the application process is, I’d check out jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/idea/programs/scholars.shtml for some useful information!
@@ByteOfMichael Ahh, sorry I missed it. Thank you so much for this awesome video, it was so beneficial. I liked your British accent too. More videos should be made on these topics since computer science is really attractful. Looking forward to see history of operating softwares :)
Help for you on your pronunciation of "Query". By the way a LOT of people get this wrong which is probably why you learned it wrong in the first place. "Query" rhymes with "wary", not "weary". It's a short a vowel sound. Thanks. All good wishes.
Blows my mind that C is closer to human language than machine code. Imagine how difficult things were for the first programmers who didn't have existing languages their computers could interpret.
Just released a new History of Programming Languages (2010s Edition): th-cam.com/video/32VEaKuBge0/w-d-xo.html
Appreciated brother ..... a very densely knowledgeable video.
Both these videos missed D & Nim & Odin.
You missed RPG and it's variants it was a lot better for business than cobal stands for Report Program Generator the file handling was superb
I thought that python was created recently. it's older than Java XD
Dumbass
@@erikaslopro664 Shut the fuck up, we all make mistakes, it's not like you've never made some.
@@erikaslopro664 i feel bad for you
It's because python wasn't very popular when it came out and Java was more popular
lol
My english teacher made my class watch this video to learn about programming languages, but then she asked us what 4chan was.
I'll just say that she said we needed to censor that detail and move on and we had a good laugh. Thank you for that
Haha glad I could give you guys a laugh!
That was the reason I couldn't use this video to show to a group of kids learning programming. Remove it and you get more viewers, but fewer laughs...
In 1991 engineering school, we had to learn FORTRAN. It was awful - syntax hell on old green-screen terminals and tractor-fed printers in the computer lab.
Then, the final week, our professor walked us through a comparison with C. It was like night and day. I was like, “Why did we waste an entire semester learning this archaic crap?!!!”
Hahah maybe he wanted you to appreciate the struggle
@Mike WikiFortran is not low level.
in 2003 we had to learn fortran :(
We learned Delphi in school in ~2011.
@@timgrei1730 Object Pascal is a way better language under the hood than C/C++ that dominates the industry. What an irony, but it is what it is. Congrats to your school by the way.
7:23 Minecraft: Bedrock Edition (which is played on consoles, tablets, smartphones, and Windows 10) is in fact written in C++. It performs much better on lower-powered hardware, compared to the original Java-based Minecraft.
Is Bedrock Edition the current one tho ?
@@OHomemLevelUp Both Java and Bedrock are currently developed.
It's also multithreaded and uses DirectX instead of OpenGL I think.
The Java edition also isn’t as optimized as the C++ version
another big performance overhead is caused by the java edition having to run on top of the java virtual machine.
Fun fact: What is displayed in the terminator vision *is't* COBOL, but (Apple2 II) MOS6502 assembly code (complete with some zero page definitions)
Fun fact: C# used to be C++++ (since C++ was an iteration from C, C# was an iteration from C++)
lol I can see why they changed it. Anymore and it would’ve been C++++++
C# was not directly derived from C++.
C# was developed from scratch by Anders Hejlsberg at Microsoft, taking the best features of several languages: C, J++, and Turbo Pascal (amongst others). The original code name was COOL - C-like Object Oriented Language.
It’s easy to come up to speed with if you’re familiar with any of the Java/C languages*. It’s also the language of choice for Unity game programming.
Cheers!
*(not JavaScript, which is a completely different animal)
@@Vivacior I know it was not derived directly, but the finalized naming convention was :)
@@Vivacior Useless reply, since the NAME was pointed out and not the CONTENT of the language.
That’s why they used the sharp sign. It’s four plusses near eachother
You forget APL and PL/1 : they were once the two most used by IBM, the first for interactive accounting the second as a coalescence of COBOL, FORTRAN and ALGOL that was supposed to replace them all.
Yeah, APL, B, VHDL, Verilog, Rust, Kotlin, Chisel...
Forth, bliss, icon. Snobol the list is too big for one video.
I watched several videos on the history of programming languages, and I am surprised that none of them mentioned a language called Prolog. Prolog was excellent in the field of medical diagnostics, and other AI applications that required significant man-machine interface.
I had to learn prolog at university. Now, 20 years later, I still don't understand it.
Used Prolog at university too. It was weird. It felt like you set up a puzzle, Prolog solved that puzzle, and it was unclear what it did exactly.
This is dope but I was wondering how they put the algorithm on the computer. Like how Tf did someone start saudering metal into a board than from there start typing on the pc? I know this is noobie but this baffles me
Haha it all just boils down to switches being either on or off!
I second ya Trevor!
@@mr.factaid9305 Did you eventually learn how it all works?
Dude this was very good! Like, seriously, how do you not have more subs than this?
Thanks my man!
Nice video. You forgot to mention Simula. Object Oriented language developed i Norway in 1967.
At the university I created some small Simula programs just for fun.
Just like to mention the UCSD Pascal P-Code system 1977 that I first came across the virtual machine to run code compiled to the p-code standard. I was Computer Science student at University of Manchester in 1981. One of our term assignments was to write a p-code interpreter for a simple concurrent process programming language. I think USCD Pascal became Borland Turbo Pascal & C++ products in the following years, as the embedded compiler/ linker directives were identical to those I had been using at university
5:32 Narrator: "During the 1980's, C began to gain traction..."
The video: **shows an image of a traction engine**
I'm a newbie just started to study programming. This video is very interesting! :)
Glad it was helpful! Good luck!
Our professor assigned to us a homework to summarize your clip. Although, it is a 15+ minutes to watch, but it takes more than one hour to watch, listen and summarize "The Brief History of Programming Languages". To be honest, till the mid of the clip, I had feeling of hate towards you! Later on, when I reached the end, also I felt so relieve, I recognized how massive the effort you spent to summarize the history. So, thank you so much and I liked it :)
Cheers!
Hahaha well I'm glad you don't hate me! Ya it was probably the video that took me the absolute longest to make and I wasn't great at video editing at the time! But I'm glad you liked it and hopefully the homework wasn't too bad!
Great video! The Australian accent at the end was spot on 👌
Aye thanks man!
So the most important invention in the early days, Object Oriented programming (Simula, 1967 in Norway) wasn't worth mentioning?
Your presentation style is phenomenal, come and relieve our lecturer ;)
hahah thanks so much!
But still no one questions the fact why they don’t teach the source knowledge in which these multiple languages derive from🧐IBM I’m coming for you✨🧚🏾♀️
Bro seriously left out Rust. (Most loved language since 2016.)
10 X = 0
20 PRINT "HELLO WORLD!"
30 X = X+1
40 IF X=10 GOTO 100
50 IF X
Thanks for the corrections at the end of the video. That helps! I would've been walking around not knowing what I was talking about. I had to go over sections of this video several times because of the confusion. I didn't know if you were joking about something or not and so paid extra attention. I don't get the British thing but whatever. Nothing wrong with making something fun I guess. I learned some things today is what counts.
those car explosions in the background...
Not to argue with this wonderful video, but Grace Hopper invented the compiler.
This video is AMAZING !!!!
Excellent work man you're the best
Thanks so much!
Curious that you call C the first real HLL. When I was learning it, some 30 years ago, the instructor said it was half a step above assembler.
No Lua? tons of games and man hours were saved because of Lua! Lua is heavily used in game development, and still is today
Ya I'm thinking of making a part 2, because there are so many other awesome languages I wasn't able to include!
terminator bot is a walking atm machine
haha basically
2:49 No ! Terminator 1984 is in assembly on a MOS Technology 6502 CPU. Like Apple II.
Is was not cobol that was used in the Terminator movie but instead the assembly language of the 6502 processor.
"The programming language 4chan... I mean fortran was created"
Great editing and very informative! Although a bit sad you didn't include Kotlin 🥺
Thanks! And don’t worry, I’m gonna create a part 2!
I'm curious why you omitted PL/I and RUST. Another minor, but very different language, was FORTH. Also a widely used language in the manufacturing sector i gcode; although it is rarely programmed directly anymore but is generated by CAD/CAM systems.
Grace Hopper Created Cobol. But I've Been Wondering How did She Created Cobol
Very nice explanation sir and thank you sir 👍
Appreciate it!
Really sir very good explanation and your concept are very clearly and good thank you sir
I'm very upset that scratch isn't on this list
2:50: ah, yes, COBOL, with LEA, STA, ORG, and other 6502 assembly instructions
I like your editing :)
Thank you so much!
What about Rust, Dart, Kotlin, Nim, Eiffel, Prolog, Erlang et so on?
Computer Chronicles clips in the background made me smile.
Wow as a beginner i found this video very useful
Rust would be cool to include. It was the first to introduce ownership model in managing resources.
I'm a bit sad you didn't mention lua, but oh well!
You explain with a hurmour,
Like fortran you said first 4chan
And b then c
And c++ = c + image of class
Practical Extraction and Report Language (PERL)
Although that's a backronym, I still make heavy use of perl's report generation features.
Very good explanation
Ha ha to the English accent at the end - not bad, but sounds more Australian! I don't get involved in new languages and client side frameworks anymore, I just got fed up with investing so much time only for them to go out of fashion a few years later, security holes, and breaking changes in newer versions requiring a rewrite to fix them.
it's really a beautiful video in all aspect. great job && tnx
Thank you so much for the kind words!
Those jokes had me dying XD
Hahah appreciate it!
Which App/Software do you use to create your videos, please? I want to create Aviation content on YT (TH-cam).
Ada Lovelace died in 1852 so I think the first date is wrong.
Ya some sources I referred too said they met in 1883, but it’s likely supposed to be mid 1830’s
This is a really great video ^^
Thanks!
R.I.P Niklaus Wirth
Great video! Thank you)
Cool video. Nice job
Thanks!
Good job
Thanks!
killed it man!
Thanks dude!
11:26 12:19 classification quadrants for languages based on "type system"
One thing tho @marselluh, i actually found some contradictive statements. Some say FORTRAN was the first programming language and some say it was Assembly. Why do you consider assembly ?
Thanks man!
Happy to help!
No mention of APL?
*heavy breathing *
11:22 HHVM - wow, what's that? opposite of LLVM ?
thank you
guess what language this is:
var
iNum1 , iProd : integer;
iNum1 := 5;
iProd := iNum1 * 10;
redOutput.Lines.Add('Answer: ' + IntToStr(iProd));
heres a hint of the language: rad
No LOGO?
Where's delphi?
Mind Blowing. All I knew was ones and zeros before this.
I'm only watching this to find out how to start from zero to create a programming language
Babbage & Lovelace are the best team ever.
facts
Changing code on the fly was pioneered by Lisp not Smalltalk...
Thank you
the narration is hilarious
What about Frege's set theory -> the algorithms (remember Euclid) -> Church's Lambda Calculus. Changing code on the fly was pioneered by Lisp not Smalltalk... Also Haskell is mainly used for programming language research, finance, and writing compilers, its not used for math at all...
Thanks for the extra info! Though on Haskell’s website it does say that it’s rising in popularity for mathematicians (at the time)
wiki.haskell.org/Haskell_and_mathematics
No Rust and D mention? Sadge
Wish to see Kotlin as well.. great video anyway man good job!
What about PL/1?
great great great! sum up! thanks!
Appreciate it!
I Wish I Can Make My Own Programming Language Someday
So where is Rust and Kotlin?
probably gonna be making a second video with those two
No love for ADA language?!?!?
The most widely used language in all defense institutions around the world because of it's safety levels and embedded software capabilities, developed in 1980.
I believe ADA deserves an honorary mention on a future addendum video.
I find it odd that he mentions Ada Lovelace but doesn't go on to talk about Ada - the language named after her!
5:52 Oh no you didn't...
How about Flutter???
Genshin For Life!
Genshin For Life!
Which version of Python is that? I've never seen "if a is/is not 5:" before, and it generates a syntax error in 3.9.6
It generates an error, because 5 is a literal.
Hey, I got into ERC in ECE major for this fall
Congrats! It’s gonna be a great time!
@@ByteOfMichael can you advise me on the IDEA program. I am an international student from India
I’m not super familiar on the program, I just know that’s you’d act as an ambassador for the Jacobs school of engineering if you were an IDEA scholar. I’d probably check out the UCSD website or email the Jacobs school of engineering for more information! Hope this helps!
@@ByteOfMichael they will probably take the course online this time. But I am not sure how will they manage to teach ece online. Moreover, I cannot apply for it as they have removed it momentarily.
Anyway, how easy is it to become an IDEA scholar
I don’t know anyone who is currently an IDEA scholar so I’m not sure how hard the application process is, I’d check out jacobsschool.ucsd.edu/idea/programs/scholars.shtml for some useful information!
What the hell is that @8:45? "while (a == true && b == false) { ...". Bruh. while(a && !b)
Why didnt you consider Julia?
I've included Julia in my newer History of Programming Languages video!: th-cam.com/video/32VEaKuBge0/w-d-xo.html
@@ByteOfMichael Ahh, sorry I missed it. Thank you so much for this awesome video, it was so beneficial. I liked your British accent too. More videos should be made on these topics since computer science is really attractful. Looking forward to see history of operating softwares :)
5:00 I'm confused why your describing C as a high level language. I thought its a low level language.
Help for you on your pronunciation of "Query". By the way a LOT of people get this wrong which is probably why you learned it wrong in the first place. "Query" rhymes with "wary", not "weary". It's a short a vowel sound. Thanks. All good wishes.
Delphi ! 💓
What about Kotlin
I cover Kotlin in my updated history of programming languages from the 2010s video here th-cam.com/video/32VEaKuBge0/w-d-xo.html
w video! thanks!
Cool ! Thank You.
Glad you liked it!
You made a few mistakes in this video. C++ was made in 1979, not 1983, and Go was created in 2007, not 2009.
Thanks for the notes!
@MF Nickster Right
I was waiting to hear kotlin😭
I feature Kotlin in the history of programming languages in the 2010s: th-cam.com/video/32VEaKuBge0/w-d-xo.html
everyone : *amaze*
me: how the first languages develop without a software or smth ofc u need coding to that *think more*
SDK and Adobe
Blows my mind that C is closer to human language than machine code. Imagine how difficult things were for the first programmers who didn't have existing languages their computers could interpret.
I can't imagine that! I took an assembly course in college, and even developing rudimentary programs in assembly takes awhile!