ANSWERS: 35
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Fortran, Basic, Pascal, C, Forth, APL, and some assembly languages (mostly 8-bit). As you can tell, I'm 'old-school'! I wish I knew Java, and I'm hoping to learn Ruby. Once you learn one language, it's much easier to learn additional ones because they all have common elements -- it's just a matter of learning a different syntax (and a few quirks) for each.
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I know VB and I am real bad at C#. Actually, I am marginally good at VB. I am decent at SQL.
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I know Java, C, C++, Lisp, Assembly, HTML, and HCL
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i know c++ object oriented langage
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I know many. In the past I mainly used 68K Assembly then x86 Assembly then C then C++ then Java. There were lots of other specialized and scripting languages (sh, bash, PHP, etc) along the way but that is definitely the mainline progression.
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c++, COBOL, RPG, ASM, VB, Java and of course BASIC.
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I only know Java. But I love it. I can only do text based and 2d arrray games though.
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Pascal, C and HTML. I'll learn Java next year.
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C++, Visual Basic and Html.
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I build plenty of websites using HTML, JavaScript and PHP these days. Professionally, when I had a "real job", I've used PL/I, COBOL, DMS, Assembler, Easytrieve and FOCUS.
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Hubby, a director of information services, knows several computer languages such as; Assembly, Fortran, Cobal, and many others, he is currently learning perl.
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PHP, SQL, Javascript. So no real languages :(
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I'm a programmer in PHP,mysql. I also knows java,javascript,c,c++
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C,C++,HTML,XML,XAML,Javascript,Dot Net,SQL,MySql,Ruby,Rails,WPF,WCF,WF,Oracle,Unix and some others.
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C
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C++ and Assembly.
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c++, HTML, Assembly and iSQL (i have done that in my BIT(Hons.))
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NNYF It stands for "Not now you fool"
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Pascal, C, C++, C#, Java, Basic, SQL, JavaScript, HTML, XSL/XPath etc, and a smattering of PHP, Perl and 80x86 assembly. Of all these, I find Java the best all-rounder.
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wow lol !! im still a beginner in that case , all i know is c++ and basics in html !!
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Programming languages are quite easy to learn rather than the programming technologies and frameworks. Just keep in mind this idea: it's not the matter which programming language you know but how you use it.
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Pascal, Prolog, C, C++, most scripting languages (Perl, Python, HTML, sh, bash, ced, awk, etc.), SQL, Java, Visual Basic, Basic, etc. My favorite all time language is Prolog. Though, I haven't touched it in years and years. Once you've learned an object oriented language (C++) and an procedural language (Pascal), you can learn just about all the rest of them rather quickly. Is this helpful? --Fearless
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Visual Basic. But for the real ancient programming languages of GW Basic, Q Basic, Turbo Pascal. Quick get Mr. Peabody and fire up the way back machine.
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Java, javascript, html, and a little C++ and python
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Mine is beating on the side of the tower and cursing until the damn thing does what it's supposed to.
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I was a programmer for around 25 years. Problem is they were all "Legacy languages" on PDP-11s, VAX, and AS/400s - BASIC, COBOL III, RPGIII and some RPGIV, and a few Control Languages for those machines. SQL on them, and a little on PC and a little PHP. HTML, though it's not a "programming language", but a "Markup language", and a LITTLE JavaScript.
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C, C++, C#, Java, Javascript, PHP, Ruby (on Rails, for that matter :D), Python, Perl, Pascal... and then a whole boatload of DSLs... sed, awk, bash, etc. OH, and x86 ASM. I think, lol. Haven't used it in... 4 years. Haven't even LOOKED at assembly since then. That was back when I thought I was going to hack every program ever created, reverse engineer it, and make money off of it. Honestly, I've had the most fun with Ruby, and I've actually done the most "Work" with PHP, and javascript (With the help of a wonderful library called cappuccino and jquery, depending on the situation.)
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Algol 60, NEAT, Pascal, FORTRAN 4, BASIC, C, Perl The ones I like are Pascal and Perl, for opposite reasons.
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English... ;D
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Java and C++
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VB.Net, C#, SQL, a little JavaScript. Haven't done COBOL or Unix shell scripting for 8 years, so I'd be rusty on them.
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C++, C#, Java, VB6, PHP. I mainly use VB6 (I'm lazy) on Windows and PHP for web development.
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html and PHP... thats all my teacher teaches me... haha... well i'll learn more later on......
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I started with GML, a little add-on for game maker. Then I got a book on C, and a tutorial on Win API programming. Then I learnt HTML, but didn't go further than the basics. Then I learned a bit of Visual Basic. Still working on it, but I don't have a full version of it. Then I got a book on assembly language, and I began looking into NASM to replace the DOS assembler. Then I discovered brainf*ck, which is quite fun but frustrating. Eventually I made a debugger for it to improve the programs I can make. I'm working on calculating square roots. And I learn Inno Setup scripting to make quick installation programs for anything I develop. Now I'm contining to learn about all of those languages, especially assembly and VB because I don't know as much about them. After that, I want to take a look at turing...
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DR SCIENTIST, yes i do, in fact, i know several. cobol, c, c++, java, assembly, html, vb scripting, java scripting, perl, pascal, effiel and im sure there are others, but cant remember.
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