Timeline of programming languages: Difference between revisions
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imported>Graham87 m 1 revision imported: import November 2001 edit from nost:Programming language timeline |
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{{more citations needed|date=December 2010}} | {{more citations needed|date=December 2010}} | ||
{{primary sources|date=December 2010}} | {{primary sources|date=December 2010}} | ||
{{Dynamic list}} | |||
}} | }} | ||
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2020}} | {{Use dmy dates|date=November 2020}} | ||
{{Programming language lists}} | {{Programming language lists}} | ||
This is a record of notable [[programming language]]s, by decade. | This is a record of notable [[programming language]]s, by decade. | ||
==1790s== | ==1790s== | ||
| Line 17: | Line 18: | ||
! Predecessor(s) | ! Predecessor(s) | ||
|- | |- | ||
|1790 <ref name=Knight>{{cite book|author=[[Edward H. Knight]]|year=1874–1875|chapter= | | 1790 <ref name=Knight>{{cite book|author=[[Edward H. Knight]]|year=1874–1875|chapter=<small>THE FIRST CENTURY OF THE REPUBLIC</small> (''Second Paper'') <small>MECHANICAL PROGRESS</small> Crompton's Fancy Loom|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=t4c7AQAAMAAJ&dq=Jacquard+attachment+1801&pg=PA91|editor-last1=Alden|editor-first1=Henry Mills |editor1-link= Henry Mills Alden |title=Harper's New Monthly Magazine |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=t4c7AQAAMAAJ|volume=L|publisher=[[Harper & Brothers]]|publication-place=327-335 [[Pearl Street (Manhattan)|Pearl street]], [[Franklin Square (Manhattan)|Franklin Square]]|publication-date=1875 |page=91|access-date=|via=[[Cornell University Library]]: [[Google Books]] |quote=Jacquard, of Lyon, is reported to have conceived the idea in 1790, and in 1801 he received from the [[Exposition des produits de l'industrie française#2nd exposition (1801)|National Exposition]] a bronze medal for his invention of a machine for figure-[[weaving]], which he patented }}</ref> | ||
|[[Jacquard loom]] (concept) <ref name=Knight/> | | [[Jacquard loom]] (concept) <ref name=Knight/> | ||
|[[Joseph Marie Jacquard]] | | [[Joseph Marie Jacquard]] | ||
| | | | ||
|- class="sortbottom" | |- class="sortbottom" | ||
|} | |} | ||
| Line 32: | Line 33: | ||
! Predecessor(s) | ! Predecessor(s) | ||
|- | |- | ||
|1801 <ref name= Geselowitz> | | 1801 <ref name= Geselowitz> | ||
*{{cite web|url=https://www.computerhistory.org/storageengine/punched-cards-control-jacquard-loom/|website=computerhistory.org|title=The Jacquard Loom: A Driver of the Industrial Revolution|date=|publisher=[[ Computer History Museum]]|access-date=|url-status=|archive-url=|archive-date=|quote=In Lyon, France, Joseph Marie Jacquard (1752-1834) demonstrated in 1801 a loom that enabled unskilled workers to weave complex patterns in silk.}} | *{{cite web|url=https://www.computerhistory.org/storageengine/punched-cards-control-jacquard-loom/|website=computerhistory.org|title=The Jacquard Loom: A Driver of the Industrial Revolution|date=|publisher=[[Computer History Museum]]|access-date=|url-status=|archive-url=|archive-date=|quote=In Lyon, France, Joseph Marie Jacquard (1752-1834) demonstrated in 1801 a loom that enabled unskilled workers to weave complex patterns in silk.}} | ||
*{{cite web|author=Michael N Geselowitz|url=https://spectrum.ieee.org/the-jacquard-loom-a-driver-of-the-industrial-revolution|website=ieee.org|title=1801: Punched cards control Jacquard loom|date=1 Jan 2019|publisher=[[IEEE]]|access-date=|url-status=|archive-url=|archive-date=|quote=At an industrial exhibition in Paris in 1801, Jacquard demonstrated }} | *{{cite web|author=Michael N Geselowitz|url=https://spectrum.ieee.org/the-jacquard-loom-a-driver-of-the-industrial-revolution|website=ieee.org|title=1801: Punched cards control Jacquard loom|date=1 Jan 2019|publisher=[[IEEE]]|access-date=|url-status=|archive-url=|archive-date=|quote=At an industrial exhibition in Paris in 1801, Jacquard demonstrated }} | ||
*{{cite web|url=https://passerelles.essentiels.bnf.fr/fr/chronologie/article/06fe304e-561f-4b9d-bf32-24339fae5877-metier-tisser-jacquard|website=bnf.fr|title=Métier à tisser de Jacquard|date=|publisher=[[Bibliothèque nationale de France|BnF]]|access-date=|url-status=|archive-url=|archive-date=|quote=En 1801, cet ingénieur de Lyon équipe le métier à tisser d’un mécanisme en fonte qui sélectionne les fils de chaîne grâce à un programme inscrit sur une carte perforée.}} | *{{cite web|url=https://passerelles.essentiels.bnf.fr/fr/chronologie/article/06fe304e-561f-4b9d-bf32-24339fae5877-metier-tisser-jacquard|website=bnf.fr|title=Métier à tisser de Jacquard|date=|publisher=[[Bibliothèque nationale de France|BnF]]|access-date=|url-status=|archive-url=|archive-date=|quote=En 1801, cet ingénieur de Lyon équipe le métier à tisser d’un mécanisme en fonte qui sélectionne les fils de chaîne grâce à un programme inscrit sur une carte perforée.}} | ||
*{{cite book|year=1888|chapter=BROCADE|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vjxKAAAAYAAJ&dq=Jacquard+attachment+1801&pg=PA746|location=|editor1-link= Thomas Spencer Baynes |title=Supplement to Encyclopedia Britannica. ( | *{{cite book|year=1888|chapter=BROCADE|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vjxKAAAAYAAJ&dq=Jacquard+attachment+1801&pg=PA746|location=|editor1-link= Thomas Spencer Baynes |title=Supplement to Encyclopedia Britannica. (<small>NINTH EDITION.</small>) <small>A DICTIONARY OF ARTS SCIENCES AND GENERAL LITERATURE</small> |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vjxKAAAAYAAJ|volume=1|edition=9|publication-place=|publisher=[[H.G. Allen]]|publication-date= 1833 |access-date=|via=[[Google Books]]|quote=Until the invention of the Jacquard attachment to the loom in the year 1801, embroidered silk goods were called brocades.}}</ref> | ||
|[[Jacquard machine]] (implementation) <ref name= Geselowitz/> | | [[Jacquard machine]] (implementation) <ref name= Geselowitz/> | ||
|Joseph Marie Jacquard | | Joseph Marie Jacquard | ||
| | | {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | ||
|- class="sortbottom" | |- class="sortbottom" | ||
|} | |} | ||
| Line 51: | Line 52: | ||
! Predecessor(s) | ! Predecessor(s) | ||
|- | |- | ||
|1837 <ref name=Rojas>{{cite web|author=Raul Rojas|url=https://cacm.acm.org/research/the-first-computer-program/|website=acm.org|title=The First Computer Program|date=13 May 2024|publisher=[[Association for Computing Machinery|ACM]]|access-date=|url-status=|archive-url=|archive-date=}}</ref> | | 1837 <ref name=Rojas>{{cite web|author=Raul Rojas|url=https://cacm.acm.org/research/the-first-computer-program/|website=acm.org|title=The First Computer Program|date=13 May 2024|publisher=[[Association for Computing Machinery|ACM]]|access-date=|url-status=|archive-url=|archive-date=}}</ref> | ||
|BAB L1 <ref name=Rojas/> | | BAB L1 <ref name=Rojas/> | ||
|[[Charles Babbage]] | | [[Charles Babbage]] | ||
|Jacquard <ref name=HollingsMartinRice>{{cite web|author1=Christopher Hollings|author2= Ursula Martin |author3=Adrian Rice|url=https://blogs.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/adalovelace/2018/07/26/ada-lovelace-and-the-analytical-engine/|website=[[Bodleian Library|bodleian.ox.ac.uk]]|title=Ada Lovelace and the Analytical Engine |date=26 July 2018|publisher=[[University of Oxford]]|access-date=|url-status=|archive-url=|archive-date=}}</ref> | | Jacquard <ref name=HollingsMartinRice>{{cite web|author1=Christopher Hollings|author2= Ursula Martin |author3=Adrian Rice|url=https://blogs.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/adalovelace/2018/07/26/ada-lovelace-and-the-analytical-engine/|website=[[Bodleian Library|bodleian.ox.ac.uk]]|title=Ada Lovelace and the Analytical Engine |date=26 July 2018|publisher=[[University of Oxford]]|access-date=|url-status=|archive-url=|archive-date=}}</ref> | ||
|- class="sortbottom" | |- class="sortbottom" | ||
|} | |} | ||
==1840s== | ==1840s== | ||
{| class="wikitable sortable" | {| class="wikitable sortable" | ||
| Line 65: | Line 67: | ||
! Predecessor(s) | ! Predecessor(s) | ||
|- | |- | ||
|1843 <ref name=HollingsMartinRice/><ref>{{cite web|author1=Amy Ackerberg-Hastings|author2= Hardy Grant|url=https://notes.math.ca/en/article/ada-lovelace-new-light-on-her-mathematics/|website=math.ca|title=CMS Notes|date=|publisher=[[Canadian Mathematical Society]]|access-date=|url-status=|archive-url=|archive-date=}}</ref> | | 1843 <ref name=HollingsMartinRice/><ref>{{cite web|author1=Amy Ackerberg-Hastings|author2= Hardy Grant|url=https://notes.math.ca/en/article/ada-lovelace-new-light-on-her-mathematics/|website=math.ca|title=CMS Notes|date=|publisher=[[Canadian Mathematical Society]]|access-date=|url-status=|archive-url=|archive-date=}}</ref> | ||
|[[Note G]] <ref>{{cite web|author=Anna Siffert|url=https://www.mpg.de/female-pioneers-of-science/Ada-Lovelace|website=mpg.de|title=Ada Lovelace and the first computer programme in the world|date=|publisher=[[Max-Planck-Gesellschaft]]|access-date=|url-status=|archive-url=|archive-date=}}(ed.: ''[[erratum]]/[[corrigendum]]'': "1848")</ref><ref name=HollingsMartinRice/> | | [[Note G]]<ref>{{cite web|author=Anna Siffert|url=https://www.mpg.de/female-pioneers-of-science/Ada-Lovelace|website=mpg.de|title=Ada Lovelace and the first computer programme in the world|date=|publisher=[[Max-Planck-Gesellschaft]]|access-date=|url-status=|archive-url=|archive-date=}}(ed.: ''[[erratum]]/[[corrigendum]]'': "1848")</ref><ref name=HollingsMartinRice/> | ||
|[[Ada Lovelace]] | | [[Ada Lovelace]] | ||
|unique language | | {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | ||
|- class="sortbottom" | |- class="sortbottom" | ||
|} | |} | ||
| Line 80: | Line 82: | ||
! Predecessor(s) | ! Predecessor(s) | ||
|- | |- | ||
|1879 | | 1879 | ||
|[[Begriffsschrift]] <ref>{{cite book|last1=Shapiro|first1=Alan N.|author-link1=Alan N. Shapiro|chapter=Introduction|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pyMMEQAAQBAJ&dq=1879+Begriffsschrift+history+of+programming+language&pg=PA20|title=Decoding Digital Culture with Science Fiction Hyper-Modernism, Hyperreality, and Posthumanism|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pyMMEQAAQBAJ|page=20|publication-place=|publisher=transcript Verlag|publication-date=2024 |isbn=9783839472422|issn=|url-status=|access-date=|quote=logic that enabled the invention of the digital-binary computer by Alan Turing" - "began with Gottlob Frege's ''Begriffsschrift''}}</ref> | | [[Begriffsschrift]]<ref>{{cite book|last1=Shapiro|first1=Alan N.|author-link1=Alan N. Shapiro|chapter=Introduction|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pyMMEQAAQBAJ&dq=1879+Begriffsschrift+history+of+programming+language&pg=PA20|title=Decoding Digital Culture with Science Fiction Hyper-Modernism, Hyperreality, and Posthumanism|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pyMMEQAAQBAJ|page=20|publication-place=|publisher=transcript Verlag|publication-date=2024 |isbn=9783839472422|issn=|url-status=|access-date=|quote=logic that enabled the invention of the digital-binary computer by Alan Turing" - "began with Gottlob Frege's ''Begriffsschrift''}}</ref> | ||
|[[Gottlob Frege]] | | [[Gottlob Frege]] | ||
| | | {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | ||
|- class="sortbottom" | |- class="sortbottom" | ||
|} | |} | ||
| Line 95: | Line 97: | ||
! Predecessor(s) | ! Predecessor(s) | ||
|- | |- | ||
|1943–45/46 <ref>{{cite book|last1=Zuse|first1=Konrad|author-link1=|chapter=Chapter 6|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ro5JOskbChAC&q=Plankalk%C3%BCl|editor-last1=Wössner|editor-first1=Hans |editor1-link=Hans Wössner|page=101|trans-title=The Computer - My Life|title=Der Computer – Mein Lebenswerk|url=|series=|language=|volume=|edition=|translator-last1=McKenna |translator-first1=Patricia |translator-link1= |translator-last2=Ross|translator-first2=J Andrew |publication-place=Berlin Heidelberg|publisher=[[Springer Science & Business Media]]|publication-date=28 September 1993 |isbn=3540564535|issn=|url-status=|access-date=|via=[[Google Books]]|quote=The work on the ''Plankalkül'' was completed in the years 1945/46 and I had no opportunity whatsoever to publish.}}</ref> | | 1943–45/46 <ref>{{cite book|last1=Zuse|first1=Konrad|author-link1=|chapter=Chapter 6|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Ro5JOskbChAC&q=Plankalk%C3%BCl|editor-last1=Wössner|editor-first1=Hans |editor1-link=Hans Wössner|page=101|trans-title=The Computer - My Life|title=Der Computer – Mein Lebenswerk|url=|series=|language=|volume=|edition=|translator-last1=McKenna |translator-first1=Patricia |translator-link1= |translator-last2=Ross|translator-first2=J Andrew |publication-place=Berlin Heidelberg|publisher=[[Springer Science & Business Media]]|publication-date=28 September 1993 |isbn=3540564535|issn=|url-status=|access-date=|via=[[Google Books]]|quote=The work on the ''Plankalkül'' was completed in the years 1945/46 and I had no opportunity whatsoever to publish.}}</ref> | ||
|[[Plankalkül]] | | [[Plankalkül]] | ||
|[[Konrad Zuse]] | | [[Konrad Zuse]] | ||
| | | {{n/a|{{nwr|none (unique language)}}}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 1943–46 | | 1943–46 | ||
| [[ENIAC|ENIAC coding system ]] | | [[ENIAC|ENIAC coding system ]] | ||
| [[John von Neumann]], [[John Mauchly]], [[J. Presper Eckert]] and [[Herman Goldstine]] after [[Alan Turing]] | | [[John von Neumann]], [[John Mauchly]], [[J. Presper Eckert]], and [[Herman Goldstine]] after [[Alan Turing]] | ||
| {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
| 1946 | | 1946 | ||
| [[ENIAC#Programming languages|ENIAC Short Code]] | | [[ENIAC#Programming languages|ENIAC Short Code]] | ||
| Richard Clippinger and John von Neumann after Alan Turing | | Richard Clippinger and John von Neumann after Alan Turing | ||
| {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
| 1947–52 | | 1947–52 | ||
| Line 123: | Line 127: | ||
| ENIAC coding system | | ENIAC coding system | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[Short Code (computer language)|Short Code]] (originally known as Brief Code) | | [[Short Code (computer language)|Short Code]] (originally known<br>as Brief Code) | ||
| John Mauchly and William F. Schmitt | | John Mauchly and William F. Schmitt | ||
| ENIAC Short Code | | ENIAC Short Code | ||
| Line 153: | Line 157: | ||
| ALGAE | | ALGAE | ||
| Edward A. Voorhees, Karl Balke | | Edward A. Voorhees, Karl Balke | ||
| | | {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Intermediate Programming Language | | Intermediate Programming Language | ||
| Line 169: | Line 173: | ||
| Stanislaus (Notation) | | Stanislaus (Notation) | ||
| [[Friedrich L. Bauer|Fritz Bauer]] | | [[Friedrich L. Bauer|Fritz Bauer]] | ||
| | | {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[Sort Merge Generator]] | | [[Sort Merge Generator]] | ||
| [[Betty Holberton]] | | [[Betty Holberton]] | ||
| {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
|rowspan=6 | 1952 | |rowspan=6 |1952 | ||
| [[Short Code (computer language)|Short Code]] (for UNIVAC II) | | [[Short Code (computer language)|Short Code]] (for UNIVAC II) | ||
| Albert B. Tonik,<ref>[http://purl.umn.edu/104288 UNIVAC conference], [[Charles Babbage Institute]], University of Minnesota. 171-page transcript of oral history with computer pioneers, including Albert B. Tonik, involved with the [[Univac]] computer, held on 17–18 May 1990.</ref> J. R. Logan | | Albert B. Tonik,<ref>[http://purl.umn.edu/104288 UNIVAC conference], [[Charles Babbage Institute]], University of Minnesota. 171-page transcript of oral history with computer pioneers, including Albert B. Tonik, involved with the [[Univac]] computer, held on 17–18 May 1990.</ref> J. R. Logan | ||
| Line 188: | Line 193: | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Operator programming | | Operator programming | ||
| Alexey Andreevich Lyapunov with the participation [[Kateryna Yushchenko (scientist)|Kateryna Yushchenko]] | | [[Alexey Andreevich Lyapunov]] with the participation [[Kateryna Yushchenko (scientist)|Kateryna Yushchenko]] | ||
| [[MESM]] | | [[MESM]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Editing Generator | | Editing Generator | ||
| Milly Koss | | [[Milly Koss]] | ||
| SORT/MERGE | | SORT/MERGE | ||
|- | |- | ||
| COMPOOL | | COMPOOL | ||
| RAND/SDC | | RAND/SDC | ||
| | | {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
|rowspan=2 |1953 | |rowspan=2 |1953 | ||
| [[Speedcoding]] | | [[Speedcoding]] | ||
| [[John Backus|John W. Backus]] | | [[John Backus|John W. Backus]] | ||
| {{n/a|none (unique language}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
| READ/PRINT | | READ/PRINT | ||
| Don Harroff, James Fishman, George Ryckman | | Don Harroff, James Fishman, George Ryckman | ||
| {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
|rowspan=6 |1954 | |rowspan=6 |1954 | ||
| [[Laning and Zierler system]] | | [[Laning and Zierler system]] | ||
| Laning, Zierler, Adams at [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology|MIT]] [[Whirlwind (computer)|Project Whirlwind]] | | [[J. Halcombe Laning]], Niel Zierler, Adams at [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology|MIT]] [[Whirlwind (computer)|Project Whirlwind]] | ||
| {{n/a|none (unique language}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
| [[Autocode|Mark I Autocode]] | | [[Autocode|Mark I Autocode]] | ||
| Line 216: | Line 224: | ||
| [[ARITH-MATIC]] | | [[ARITH-MATIC]] | ||
| Team led by [[Grace Hopper]] at UNIVAC | | Team led by [[Grace Hopper]] at UNIVAC | ||
|rowspan=2|A-0 | |rowspan=2 |A-0 | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[MATH-MATIC]] | | [[MATH-MATIC]] | ||
| Team led by Charles Katz | | Team led by [[Charles Katz]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| MATRIX MATH | | MATRIX MATH | ||
| H G Kahrimanian | | H G Kahrimanian | ||
| | | {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[Information Processing Language|IPL I]] (concept) | | [[Information Processing Language|IPL I]] (concept) | ||
| [[Allen Newell]], [[Cliff Shaw]], [[Herbert A. Simon]] | | [[Allen Newell]], [[Cliff Shaw]], [[Herbert A. Simon]] | ||
| {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | |||
|- | |- | ||
| 1954–55 | | 1954–55 | ||
| Line 236: | Line 245: | ||
| [[Address (programming language)|Address programming language]] | | [[Address (programming language)|Address programming language]] | ||
| [[Kateryna Yushchenko (scientist)|Kateryna Yushchenko]] | | [[Kateryna Yushchenko (scientist)|Kateryna Yushchenko]] | ||
| Operator programming | | Operator programming | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[FLOW-MATIC]] | | [[FLOW-MATIC]] | ||
| Line 252: | Line 261: | ||
| Freiburger Code<ref>{{cite web|url=http://pl.attitu.de/zuse/technik/freiburger.html|title=Der Freiburger Code auf der Zuse|language=de|access-date=26 October 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.horst-zuse.homepage.t-online.de/seite51.html|title=Z22|author=H. Zuse|access-date=26 October 2014}}</ref> | | Freiburger Code<ref>{{cite web|url=http://pl.attitu.de/zuse/technik/freiburger.html|title=Der Freiburger Code auf der Zuse|language=de|access-date=26 October 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.horst-zuse.homepage.t-online.de/seite51.html|title=Z22|author=H. Zuse|access-date=26 October 2014}}</ref> | ||
| [[University of Freiburg]] | | [[University of Freiburg]] | ||
| {{n/a}} | | {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| PRINT | | PRINT | ||
| Line 279: | Line 288: | ||
| [[GEORGE (programming language)|GEORGE]] | | [[GEORGE (programming language)|GEORGE]] | ||
| [[Charles Leonard Hamblin]] | | [[Charles Leonard Hamblin]] | ||
| | | {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[FORTRAN I]] (implementation) | | [[FORTRAN I]] (implementation) | ||
| Line 287: | Line 296: | ||
| [[COMIT]] (concept) | | [[COMIT]] (concept) | ||
| [[Victor Yngve]] | | [[Victor Yngve]] | ||
| | | {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 1957–58 | | 1957–58 | ||
| Line 318: | Line 327: | ||
| [[FACT computer language|FACT]] | | [[FACT computer language|FACT]] | ||
| [[Fletcher R. Jones]], [[Roy Nutt]], Robert L. Patrick | | [[Fletcher R. Jones]], [[Roy Nutt]], Robert L. Patrick | ||
| | | {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[COBOL]] (concept) | | [[COBOL]] (concept) | ||
| Line 329: | Line 338: | ||
|- | |- | ||
| [[Lisp (programming language)|LISP]] (implementation) | | [[Lisp (programming language)|LISP]] (implementation) | ||
| [[ | | [[Steve Russell (computer scientist)|Steve Russell]] | ||
| IPL | | IPL | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Line 627: | Line 636: | ||
| [[B (programming language)|B]] | | [[B (programming language)|B]] | ||
| [[Ken Thompson]], with contributions from [[Dennis Ritchie]] | | [[Ken Thompson]], with contributions from [[Dennis Ritchie]] | ||
| [[Fortran]]<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EY6q5dv_B-o | title=Ken Thompson interviewed by Brian Kernighan at VCF East 2019 | website=[[YouTube]] | date=6 May 2019 }}</ref> | | [[BCPL]], [[Fortran]]<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EY6q5dv_B-o | title=Ken Thompson interviewed by Brian Kernighan at VCF East 2019 | website=[[YouTube]] | date=6 May 2019 }}</ref> | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 1969 | | 1969 | ||
| Line 1,079: | Line 1,088: | ||
| 1984 | | 1984 | ||
| [[Common Lisp]] | | [[Common Lisp]] | ||
| [[Guy L. Steele, Jr.]] | | [[Guy L. Steele, Jr.]], many others | ||
| LISP | | LISP | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 1984 | | 1984 | ||
| [[Coq | | [[Rocq]] (then: Coq) | ||
| [[INRIA]] | | [[INRIA]] | ||
| | | | ||
| Line 1,210: | Line 1,219: | ||
| [[Mathematica]] ([[Wolfram Language]]<!-- was named that years later, is the language of the larger system Mathematica-->) | | [[Mathematica]] ([[Wolfram Language]]<!-- was named that years later, is the language of the larger system Mathematica-->) | ||
| [[Wolfram Research]] | | [[Wolfram Research]] | ||
| {{n/a|none (unique language)}} | | {{n/a|none (unique language), though borrowing some syntax from C and certain functionalities of lists from LISP}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 1988 | | 1988 | ||
| Line 1,255: | Line 1,264: | ||
|[[ANSI C|C90]] | |[[ANSI C|C90]] | ||
|C90 ISO/IEC 9899:1990 | |C90 ISO/IEC 9899:1990 | ||
|[[ | |[[C (programming language)|C]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 1989 | | 1989 | ||
| Line 1,650: | Line 1,659: | ||
| [[C99]] | | [[C99]] | ||
| C99 ISO/IEC 9899:1999 | | C99 ISO/IEC 9899:1999 | ||
| [[ | | [[ANSI C#C90|C90]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 1999 | | 1999 | ||
| Line 1,879: | Line 1,888: | ||
| [[Agda (programming language)|Agda]] | | [[Agda (programming language)|Agda]] | ||
| Ulf Norell | | Ulf Norell | ||
| [[ | | [[Rocq]], [[Epigram (programming language)|Epigram]], [[Haskell]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 2007 | | 2007 | ||
| Line 1,898: | Line 1,907: | ||
| 2007 | | 2007 | ||
| [[Oberon (programming language)#Oberon-07|Oberon-07]] | | [[Oberon (programming language)#Oberon-07|Oberon-07]] | ||
| [[Niklaus | | [[Niklaus Wirth]] | ||
| Oberon | | Oberon | ||
|- | |- | ||
| Line 1,939: | Line 1,948: | ||
| [[Idris (programming language)|Idris]] | | [[Idris (programming language)|Idris]] | ||
| Edwin Brady | | Edwin Brady | ||
| [[Haskell]], [[Agda (programming language)|Agda]], [[ | | [[Haskell]], [[Agda (programming language)|Agda]], [[Rocq]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 2009 | | 2009 | ||
| Line 2,068: | Line 2,077: | ||
| [[Lean (programming language)|Lean]] | | [[Lean (programming language)|Lean]] | ||
| [[Microsoft Research]] | | [[Microsoft Research]] | ||
| [[ML (programming language)|ML]], [[ | | [[ML (programming language)|ML]], [[Rocq]], [[Haskell]], [[Agda (programming language)|Agda]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 2013 | | 2013 | ||
| Line 2,207: | Line 2,216: | ||
| [[Gleam (programming language)|Gleam]] | | [[Gleam (programming language)|Gleam]] | ||
| Louis Pilfold, Fly.io | | Louis Pilfold, Fly.io | ||
| [[Erlang (programming language) |Erlang]], [[Elixir (programming language) |Elixir]], [[Elm (programming language)|Elm]], [[Rust (programming language)|Rust]], [[Go (programming language)|Go]], [[OCaml]], [[JavaScript]] | | [[Erlang (programming language)|Erlang]], [[Elixir (programming language)|Elixir]], [[Elm (programming language)|Elm]], [[Rust (programming language)|Rust]], [[Go (programming language)|Go]], [[OCaml]], [[JavaScript]] | ||
|- | |- | ||
| 2024 | | 2024 | ||
| Line 2,238: | Line 2,247: | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
* [http://hopl.info/ Online Historical Encyclopaedia of Programming Languages] | * [http://hopl.info/ Online Historical Encyclopaedia of Programming Languages] | ||
* [ | * [https://merd.sourceforge.net/pixel/language-study/diagram.html Diagram & history of programming languages] | ||
* [http://www.levenez.com/lang/ Eric Levenez's timeline diagram of computer languages history] | * [http://www.levenez.com/lang/ Eric Levenez's timeline diagram of computer languages history] | ||
Latest revision as of 13:40, 26 October 2025
Template:Short description Template:Multiple issues Template:Use dmy dates Template:Programming language lists
This is a record of notable programming languages, by decade.
1790s
| Year | Name | Developer | Predecessor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1790 [1] | Jacquard loom (concept) [1] | Joseph Marie Jacquard |
1800s
| Year | Name | Developer | Predecessor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1801 [2] | Jacquard machine (implementation) [2] | Joseph Marie Jacquard | none (unique language) |
1830s
| Year | Name | Developer | Predecessor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1837 [3] | BAB L1 [3] | Charles Babbage | Jacquard [4] |
1840s
| Year | Name | Developer | Predecessor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1843 [4][5] | Note G[6][4] | Ada Lovelace | none (unique language) |
1870s
| Year | Name | Developer | Predecessor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1879 | Begriffsschrift[7] | Gottlob Frege | none (unique language) |
1940s
| Year | Name | Chief developer, company | Predecessor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1943–45/46 [8] | Plankalkül | Konrad Zuse | Template:Nwr |
| 1943–46 | ENIAC coding system | John von Neumann, John Mauchly, J. Presper Eckert, and Herman Goldstine after Alan Turing | none (unique language) |
| 1946 | ENIAC Short Code | Richard Clippinger and John von Neumann after Alan Turing | none (unique language) |
| 1947–52 | ARC/Birkbeck Assembler | Kathleen Booth | ENIAC Short Code[9] |
| 1948 | Plankalkül (year of publication) | Konrad Zuse | |
| 1949 | EDSAC Initial Orders | David Wheeler | ENIAC coding system |
| Short Code (originally known as Brief Code) |
John Mauchly and William F. Schmitt | ENIAC Short Code | |
| Year | Name | Chief developer, company | Predecessor(s) |
1950s
| Year | Name | Chief developer, company | Predecessor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1950 | Short Code (for UNIVAC I) | William F. Schmitt | Short Code |
| 1951 | Superplan | Heinz Rutishauser | Plankalkül |
| ALGAE | Edward A. Voorhees, Karl Balke | none (unique language) | |
| Intermediate Programming Language | Arthur Burks | Short Code | |
| Boehm unnamed coding system | Corrado Böhm | CPC Coding scheme | |
| Klammerausdrücke | Konrad Zuse | Plankalkül | |
| Stanislaus (Notation) | Fritz Bauer | none (unique language) | |
| Sort Merge Generator | Betty Holberton | none (unique language) | |
| 1952 | Short Code (for UNIVAC II) | Albert B. Tonik,[10] J. R. Logan | Short Code (for UNIVAC I) |
| A-0 | Grace Hopper | Short Code | |
| Glennie Autocode | Alick Glennie | CPC Coding scheme | |
| Operator programming | Alexey Andreevich Lyapunov with the participation Kateryna Yushchenko | MESM | |
| Editing Generator | Milly Koss | SORT/MERGE | |
| COMPOOL | RAND/SDC | none (unique language) | |
| 1953 | Speedcoding | John W. Backus | none (unique language |
| READ/PRINT | Don Harroff, James Fishman, George Ryckman | none (unique language) | |
| 1954 | Laning and Zierler system | J. Halcombe Laning, Niel Zierler, Adams at MIT Project Whirlwind | none (unique language |
| Mark I Autocode | Tony Brooker | Glennie Autocode | |
| ARITH-MATIC | Team led by Grace Hopper at UNIVAC | A-0 | |
| MATH-MATIC | Team led by Charles Katz | ||
| MATRIX MATH | H G Kahrimanian | none (unique language) | |
| IPL I (concept) | Allen Newell, Cliff Shaw, Herbert A. Simon | none (unique language) | |
| 1954–55 | FORTRAN (concept) | Team led by John W. Backus at IBM | Speedcoding |
| 1955 | Address programming language | Kateryna Yushchenko | Operator programming |
| FLOW-MATIC | Team led by Grace Hopper at UNIVAC | A-0 | |
| BACAIC | M. Grems, R. Porter | ||
| PACT I | SHARE | FORTRAN, A-2 | |
| Freiburger Code[11][12] | University of Freiburg | none (unique language) | |
| IBM | |||
| 1955–56 | Sequentielle Formelübersetzung | Fritz Bauer, Karl Samelson | Boehm |
| IT | Team led by Alan Perlis | Laning and Zierler | |
| 1956–58 | LISP (concept) | John McCarthy | IPL |
| 1957 | COMTRAN | Bob Bemer | FLOW-MATIC |
| GEORGE | Charles Leonard Hamblin | none (unique language) | |
| FORTRAN I (implementation) | John W. Backus at IBM | FORTRAN | |
| COMIT (concept) | Victor Yngve | none (unique language) | |
| 1957–58 | UNICODE | Remington Rand UNIVAC | MATH-MATIC |
| 1958 | FORTRAN II | Team led by John W. Backus at IBM | FORTRAN I |
| ALGOL 58 (IAL) | ACM/GAMM | FORTRAN, IT, Sequentielle Formelübersetzung | |
| IPL II (implementation) | Allen Newell, Cliff Shaw, Herbert A. Simon | IPL I | |
| IPL V | Allen Newell, Cliff Shaw, Herbert A. Simon | IPL II | |
| 1959 | APT | Douglas T. Ross | |
| FACT | Fletcher R. Jones, Roy Nutt, Robert L. Patrick | none (unique language) | |
| COBOL (concept) | The CODASYL Committee | FLOW-MATIC, COMTRAN, FACT | |
| JOVIAL | Jules Schwartz at SDC | ALGOL 58 | |
| LISP (implementation) | Steve Russell | IPL | |
| MAD – Michigan Algorithm Decoder | Bruce Arden, Bernard Galler, Robert M. Graham | ALGOL 58 | |
| TRAC (concept) | Calvin Mooers | ||
| Year | Name | Chief developer, company | Predecessor(s) |
1960s
| Year | Name | Chief developer, company | Predecessor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1960 | ALGOL 60 | ALGOL 58 | |
| 1960 | COBOL 61 (implementation) | The CODASYL Committee | FLOW-MATIC, COMTRAN |
| 1960 | SAKO | Leon Łukaszewicz, et al., Polish Academy of Sciences[13] | none (unique language) |
| 1961 | COMIT (implementation) | Victor Yngve | none (unique language) |
| 1961 | GPSS | Geoffrey Gordon, IBM | none (unique language) |
| 1962 | FORTRAN IV | IBM | FORTRAN II |
| 1962 | APL (concept) | Kenneth E. Iverson | none (unique language) |
| 1962 | Simula (concept) | Ole-Johan Dahl (mostly) | ALGOL 60 |
| 1962 | SNOBOL | Ralph Griswold, et al. | FORTRAN II, COMIT |
| 1963 | Combined Programming Language (CPL) (concept) | Barron, Christopher Strachey, et al. | ALGOL 60 |
| 1963 | SNOBOL3 | Griswold, et al. | SNOBOL |
| 1963 | ALGOL 68 (concept) | Adriaan van Wijngaarden, et al. | ALGOL 60 |
| 1963 | JOSS I | Cliff Shaw, RAND | ALGOL 58 |
| 1964 | MIMIC | H. E. Petersen, et al. | MIDAS |
| 1964 | COWSEL | Rod Burstall, Robin Popplestone | CPL, LISP |
| 1964 | PL/I (concept) | IBM | ALGOL 60, COBOL, FORTRAN |
| 1964 | Basic Assembly Language | IBM | Assembly language |
| 1964 | BASIC | John George Kemeny, Thomas Eugene Kurtz at Dartmouth College | FORTRAN II, JOSS |
| 1964 | IBM RPG | IBM | FARGO |
| 1964 | Mark-IV | Informatics | |
| 1964 | Speakeasy-2 | Stanley Cohen at Argonne National Laboratory | Speakeasy |
| 1964 | TRAC (implementation) | Calvin Mooers | |
| 1964 | P′′ | Corrado Böhm | none (unique language) |
| 1964? | IITRAN | ||
| 1965 | RPG II | IBM | FARGO, RPG |
| 1965 | MAD/I (concept) | University of Michigan | MAD, ALGOL 60, PL/I |
| 1965 | TELCOMP | BBN | JOSS |
| 1965 | Atlas Autocode | Tony Brooker, Derrick Morris at Manchester University | ALGOL 60, Autocode |
| 1965 | PL360 (concept) | Niklaus Wirth | ALGOL 60, ESPOL |
| 1966 | JOSS II | Chuck Baker, RAND | JOSS I |
| 1966 | ALGOL W | Niklaus Wirth, C. A. R. Hoare | ALGOL 60 |
| 1966 | FORTRAN 66 | John Backus and his team | FORTRAN IV |
| 1966 | ISWIM (concept) | Peter J. Landin | LISP |
| 1966 | CORAL 66 | I. F. Currie, M. Griffiths | ALGOL 60 |
| 1966 | APL (implementation)[14] | Kenneth E. Iverson | none (unique language) |
| 1967 | BCPL | Martin Richards | CPL |
| 1967 | MUMPS | Massachusetts General Hospital | FORTRAN, TELCOMP |
| 1967 | Simula 67 (implementation) | Ole-Johan Dahl, Bjørn Myhrhaug, Kristen Nygaard at Norsk Regnesentral | ALGOL 60 |
| 1967 | Interlisp | D.G. Bobrow and D.L. Murphy | Lisp |
| 1967 | EXAPT | Herwart Opitz, Wilhelm Simon, Günter Spur, and Gottfried Stute at RWTH Aachen University and TU Berlin | APT |
| 1967 | SNOBOL4 | Ralph Griswold, et al. | SNOBOL3 |
| 1967 | XPL | William M. McKeeman, et al. at University of California, Santa Cruz J. J. Horning, et al. at Stanford University |
PL/I |
| 1968 | ALGOL 68 (UNESCO/IFIP standard) | Adriaan van Wijngaarden, Barry J. Mailloux, John E. L. Peck and Cornelis H. A. Koster, et al. | ALGOL 60 |
| 1968 | POP-1 | Rod Burstall, Robin Popplestone | COWSEL |
| 1968 | DIBOL-8 | DEC | DIBOL |
| 1968 | Forth (concept) | Moore | |
| 1968 | Logo | Wally Feurzeig, Seymour Papert, Cynthia Solomon | LISP |
| 1968 | MAPPER | Unisys | CRT RPS |
| 1968 | REFAL (implementation) | Valentin Turchin | none (unique language) |
| 1968 | TTM (implementation) | Steven Caine and E. Kent Gordon, California Institute of Technology | GAP, GPM |
| 1968 | PILOT | John Amsden Starkweather, University of California, San Francisco | Computest |
| 1968 | PL360 (implementation) | Niklaus Wirth | ALGOL 60, ESPOL |
| 1968 | PL/S (as Basic Systems Language) | IBM | Assembly language |
| 1969 | PL/I (implementation) | IBM | ALGOL 60, COBOL, FORTRAN |
| 1969 | B | Ken Thompson, with contributions from Dennis Ritchie | BCPL, Fortran[15] |
| 1969 | Polymorphic Programming Language (PPL) | Thomas A. Standish at Harvard University | |
| 1969 | SETL | Jack Schwartz at Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences | ALGOL 60 |
| 1969 | TUTOR | Paul Tenczar & University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign | |
| 1969 | Edinburgh IMP | Edinburgh University | ALGOL 60, Autocode, Atlas Autocode |
| Year | Name | Chief developer, company | Predecessor(s) |
1970s
1980s
| Year | Name | Chief developer, company | Predecessor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1980 | Ada 80 (MIL-STD-1815) | Jean Ichbiah at CII Honeywell Bull | ALGOL 68, Green |
| 1980 | C with classes | Bjarne Stroustrup[16] | C, Simula 67 |
| 1980 | Applesoft III | Apple Computer | Applesoft II BASIC |
| 1980 | Apple III Microsoft BASIC | Microsoft | Microsoft BASIC |
| 1980–81 | CBASIC | Gordon Eubanks | BASIC, Compiler Systems, Digital Research |
| 1980 | Smalltalk-80 | Adele Goldberg at Xerox PARC | Smalltalk-76 |
| 1981 | TI Extended BASIC | Texas Instruments | TI BASIC (TI 99/4A) |
| 1981 | BBC BASIC | Acorn Computers, Sophie Wilson | BASIC |
| 1981 | IBM BASICA | Microsoft | BASIC |
| 1982? | Speakeasy-IV | Stanley Cohen, et al. at Speakeasy Computing Corporation | Speakeasy-3 |
| 1982? | Draco | Chris Gray | Pascal, C, ALGOL 68 |
| 1982 | PostScript | Warnock | InterPress |
| 1982 | Turing | Ric Holt and James Cordy, at University of Toronto | Euclid |
| 1983 | GW-BASIC | Microsoft | IBM BASICA |
| 1983 | Turbo Pascal | Hejlsberg at Borland | Pascal |
| 1983 | Ada 83 (ANSI/MIL-STD-1815A) | Jean Ichbiah at Alsys | Ada 80, Green |
| 1983 | Objective-C | Brad Cox | Smalltalk, C |
| 1983 | C++[17] | Bjarne Stroustrup | C with Classes |
| 1983 | True BASIC | John George Kemeny, Thomas Eugene Kurtz at Dartmouth College | BASIC |
| 1983 | occam | David May | EPL |
| 1983? | ABAP | SAP AG | COBOL |
| 1983 | KornShell (ksh) | David Korn | sh |
| 1983 | Clascal | Apple Computer | Pascal |
| 1984 | CLIPPER | Nantucket | dBase |
| 1984 | Common Lisp | Guy L. Steele, Jr., many others | LISP |
| 1984 | Rocq (then: Coq) | INRIA | |
| 1984 | RPL | Hewlett-Packard | Forth, Lisp |
| 1984 | Standard ML | ML | |
| 1984 | Redcode | Alexander Dewdney and D.G. Jones | |
| 1984 | OPL | Psion | BASIC |
| 1985 | PARADOX | Borland | dBase |
| 1985 | QuickBASIC | Microsoft | BASIC |
| 1986 | Clarion | Bruce Barrington | |
| 1986 | CorVision | Cortex | INFORM |
| 1986 | Eiffel | Bertrand Meyer | Simula 67, Ada |
| 1986 | GFA BASIC | Frank Ostrowski | BASIC |
| 1986 | Informix-4GL | Informix | |
| 1986 | LabVIEW | National Instruments | |
| 1986 | Miranda | David Turner at University of Kent | SASL |
| 1986 | Object Pascal | Apple Computer | Pascal |
| 1986 | PROMAL | C | |
| 1986 | Erlang | Joe Armstrong and others in Ericsson | PLEX, Prolog |
| 1987 | Ada ISO 8652:1987 | ANSI/MIL-STD-1815A unchanged | Ada 83 |
| 1987 | Self (concept) | Sun Microsystems Inc. | Smalltalk |
| 1987 | occam 2 | David May and INMOS | occam |
| 1987 | HyperTalk | Apple Computer | none (unique language) |
| 1987 | Clean | Software Technology Research Group of Radboud University Nijmegen | none (unique language) |
| 1987 | Perl | Larry Wall | C, sed, awk, sh |
| 1987 | Oberon | Niklaus Wirth | Modula-2 |
| 1987 | Turbo Basic | Robert 'Bob' Zale | BASIC/Z |
| 1988 | Mathematica (Wolfram Language) | Wolfram Research | none (unique language), though borrowing some syntax from C and certain functionalities of lists from LISP |
| 1988 | Octave | MATLAB | |
| 1988 | Tcl | John Ousterhout | Awk, Lisp |
| 1988 | STOS BASIC | François Lionet and Constantin Sotiropoulos | BASIC |
| 1988 | Actor | Charles Duff, the Whitewater Group | Forth, Smalltalk |
| 1988 | Object REXX | Simon C. Nash | REXX, Smalltalk |
| 1988 | SPARK | Bernard A. Carré | Ada |
| 1988 | A+ | Arthur Whitney | APL, A |
| 1988 | Hamilton C shell | Nicole Hamilton | C shell |
| 1988–1989 | C90 | C90 ISO/IEC 9899:1990 | C |
| 1989 | Turbo Pascal OOP | Anders Hejlsberg at Borland | Turbo Pascal, Object Pascal |
| 1989 | Modula-3 | Cardeli, et al. DEC and Olivetti | Modula-2 |
| 1989 | PowerBASIC | Robert 'Bob' Zale | Turbo Basic |
| 1989 | VisSim | Peter Darnell, Visual Solutions | |
| 1989 | LPC | Lars Pensjö | |
| 1989 | Bash | Brian Fox | Bourne shell, C shell, KornShell |
| 1989 | Magik | Arthur Chance, of Smallworld Systems Ltd | Smalltalk |
| Year | Name | Chief developer, company | Predecessor(s) |
1990s
| Year | Name | Chief developer, company | Predecessor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1990 | Sather | Steve Omohundro | Eiffel |
| 1990 | AMOS BASIC | François Lionet and Constantin Sotiropoulos | STOS BASIC |
| 1990 | AMPL | Robert Fourer, David Gay and Brian Kernighan at Bell Laboratories | |
| 1990 | Object Oberon | H Mössenböck, J Templ, R Griesemer | Oberon |
| 1990 | J | Kenneth E. Iverson, Roger Hui at Iverson Software | APL, FP |
| 1990 | Haskell | Miranda, Clean | |
| 1990 | EuLisp | Common Lisp, Scheme | |
| 1990 | Z shell (zsh) | Paul Falstad at Princeton University | ksh |
| 1990 | SKILL | T. J. Barnes at Cadence Design Systems | Franz Lisp |
| 1991 | GNU E | David J. DeWitt, Michael J. Carey | C++ |
| 1991 | Oberon-2 | Hanspeter Mössenböck, Niklaus Wirth | Object Oberon |
| 1991 | Oz | Gert Smolka and his students | Prolog |
| 1991 | Q | Albert Gräf | |
| 1991 | Python | Guido van Rossum | Perl, ABC, C |
| 1991 | Visual Basic | Alan Cooper, sold to Microsoft | QuickBASIC |
| 1992 | Borland Pascal | Turbo Pascal OOP | |
| 1992 | Dylan | Many people at Apple Computer | Common Lisp, Scheme |
| 1992 | S-Lang | John E. Davis | PostScript |
| 1993? | Self (implementation) | Sun Microsystems | Smalltalk |
| 1993 | Amiga E | Wouter van Oortmerssen | DEX, C, Modula-2 |
| 1993 | Brainfuck | Urban Müller | P'′ |
| 1993 | LiveCode Transcript | HyperTalk | |
| 1993 | AppleScript | Apple Computer | HyperTalk |
| 1993 | K | Arthur Whitney | APL, Lisp |
| 1993 | Lua | Roberto Ierusalimschy et al. at Tecgraf, PUC-Rio | Scheme, SNOBOL, Modula, CLU, C++ |
| 1993 | R | Robert Gentleman and Ross Ihaka | S |
| 1993 | ZPL | Chamberlain et al. at University of Washington | C |
| 1993 | NewtonScript | Walter Smith | Self, Dylan |
| 1993 | Euphoria | Robert Craig | SNOBOL, AWK, ABC, Icon, Python |
| 1994 | Claire | Yves Caseau | Smalltalk, SETL, OPS5, Lisp, ML, C, LORE, LAURE |
| 1994 | ANSI Common Lisp | Common Lisp | |
| 1994 | RAPID | ABB | ARLA |
| 1994 | Pike | Fredrik Hübinette et al. at Linköping University | LPC, C, μLPC |
| 1994 | ANS Forth | Elizabeth Rather, et al. | Forth |
| 1995 | Ada 95 | S. Tucker Taft, et al. at Intermetrics | Ada 83 |
| 1995 | Borland Delphi | Anders Hejlsberg at Borland | Borland Pascal |
| 1995 | ColdFusion (CFML) | Allaire | |
| 1995 | Java | James Gosling at Sun Microsystems | C, Simula 67, C++, Smalltalk, Ada 83, Objective-C, Mesa |
| 1995 | LiveScript | Brendan Eich at Netscape | Self, C, Scheme |
| 1995 | Mercury | Zoltan Somogyi at University of Melbourne | Prolog, Hope, Haskell |
| 1995 | PHP | Rasmus Lerdorf | Perl |
| 1995 | Ruby | Yukihiro Matsumoto | Smalltalk, Perl |
| 1995 | JavaScript | Brendan Eich at Netscape | LiveScript |
| 1995 | Racket | Matthew Flatt at Rice University | Scheme, Lisp |
| 1996 | CSS | Håkon Wium Lie and Bert Bos | SGML |
| 1996 | Curl | David Kranz, Steve Ward, Chris Terman at MIT | Lisp, C++, Tcl/Tk, TeX, HTML |
| 1996 | Lasso | Blue World Communications | |
| 1996 | NetRexx | Mike Cowlishaw | REXX |
| 1996 | OCaml | INRIA | Caml Light, Standard ML |
| 1996 | Perl Data Language (PDL) | Karl Glazebrook, Jarle Brinchmann, Tuomas Lukka, and Christian Soeller | APL, Perl |
| 1996 | Pure Data | Miller Puckette | Max |
| 1996 | VBScript | Microsoft | Visual Basic |
| 1997 | Component Pascal | Oberon Microsystems | Oberon-2 |
| 1997 | E | Mark S. Miller | Joule, Original-E |
| 1997 | Pico | Free University of Brussels | Scheme |
| 1997 | Squeak | Alan Kay, et al. at Apple Computer | Smalltalk-80, Self |
| 1997 | ECMAScript | ECMA TC39-TG1 | JavaScript |
| 1997 | F-Script | Philippe Mougin | Smalltalk, APL, Objective-C |
| 1997 | ISLISP | ISO Standard ISLISP | Common Lisp |
| 1997 | Tea | Jorge Nunes | Java, Scheme, Tcl |
| 1997 | REBOL | Carl Sassenrath, Rebol Technologies | Self, Forth, Lisp, Logo |
| 1998 | Logtalk | Paulo Moura (then at University of Coimbra) | Prolog |
| 1998 | ActionScript | Gary Grossman | ECMAScript |
| 1998 | Standard C++ | ANSI/ISO Standard C++ | C++, Standard C, C |
| 1998 | PureBasic | Frederic Laboureur, Fantaisie Software | |
| 1998 | UnrealScript | Tim Sweeney at Epic Games | C++, Java |
| 1998 | XSLT (+ XPath) | W3C, James Clark | DSSSL |
| 1998 | Xojo (REALbasic at the time) | Xojo, Andrew Barry | Visual Basic |
| 1999 | C99 | C99 ISO/IEC 9899:1999 | C90 |
| 1999 | Gambas | Benoît Minisini | Visual Basic, Java |
| 1999 | Game Maker Language (GML) | Mark Overmars | Game Maker |
| 1999 | Harbour | Antonio Linares | dBase, Clipper |
| Year | Name | Chief developer, company | Predecessor(s) |
2000s
| Year | Name | Chief developer, company | Predecessor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | Join Java | G Stewart von Itzstein | Java |
| 2000 | DarkBASIC | The Game Creators | |
| 2000 | C# | Anders Hejlsberg, Microsoft (ECMA) | C, C++, Java, Delphi, Modula-2 |
| 2001 | Joy | Manfred von Thun | FP, Forth |
| 2001 | AspectJ | Gregor Kiczales, Xerox PARC | Java, Common Lisp |
| 2001 | D | Walter Bright, Digital Mars | C, C++, C#, Java |
| 2001 | Processing | Casey Reas and Benjamin Fry | Java, C, C++[18] |
| 2001 | Visual Basic .NET | Microsoft | Visual Basic |
| 2001 | GDScript (GDS) | Juan Linietsky, Ariel Manzur (OKAM Studio) | Godot |
| 2001 | Shakespeare Programming Language | Jon Åslund, Karl Hasselström | |
| 2002 | Io | Steve Dekorte | Self, NewtonScript, Lua |
| 2002 | Gosu | Guidewire Software | GScript |
| 2002 | Scratch | Mitchel Resnick, John Maloney, Natalie Rusk, Evelyn Eastmond, Tammy Stern, Amon Millner, Jay Silver, and Brian Silverman | Logo, Smalltalk, Squeak, E-Toys, HyperCard, AgentSheets, StarLogo, Tweak |
| 2003 | Nix | Eelco Dolstra | Miranda/SASL, Haskell |
| 2003 | Nemerle | University of Wrocław | C#, ML, MetaHaskell |
| 2003 | Factor | Slava Pestov | Joy, Forth, Lisp |
| 2003 | Scala | Martin Odersky | Smalltalk, Java, Haskell, Standard ML, OCaml |
| 2003 | C++03 | C++ ISO/IEC 14882:2003 | C++, Standard C, C |
| 2003 | Squirrel | Alberto Demichelis | Lua |
| 2003 | Boo | Rodrigo B. de Oliveira | Python, C# |
| 2004 | Subtext | Jonathan Edwards | none (unique language) |
| 2004 | Alma-0 | Krzysztof Apt, Centrum Wiskunde & Informatica | none (unique language) |
| 2004 | FreeBASIC | Andre Victor | QBasic |
| 2004 | Groovy | James Strachan | Java |
| 2004 | Little b | Aneil Mallavarapu, Harvard Medical School, Department of Systems Biology | Lisp |
| 2005 | Fantom | Brian Frank, Andy Frank | C#, Scala, Ruby, Erlang |
| 2005 | F# | Don Syme, Microsoft Research | OCaml, C#, Haskell |
| 2005 | Haxe | Nicolas Cannasse | ActionScript, OCaml, Java |
| 2005 | Oxygene | RemObjects Software | Object Pascal, C# |
| 2005 | PWCT | Mahmoud Samir Fayed | none (unique language) |
| 2005 | Seed7 | Thomas Mertes | none (unique language) |
| 2005 | fish | Thomas Mertes | none (unique language) |
| 2005 | HolyC | Terry A. Davis | C, C++ |
| 2006 | Cobra | Chuck Esterbrook | Python, C#, Eiffel, Objective-C |
| 2006 | Windows PowerShell | Microsoft | C#, ksh, Perl, CL, DCL, SQL |
| 2006 | OptimJ | Ateji | Java |
| 2006 | Fortress | Guy L. Steele Jr. | Scala, ML, Haskell |
| 2006 | Vala | GNOME | C# |
| 2007 | Ada 2005 | Ada Rapporteur Group | Ada 95 |
| 2007 | Agda | Ulf Norell | Rocq, Epigram, Haskell |
| 2007 | QB64 | Galleon, QB64Team | QBasic |
| 2007 | Clojure | Rich Hickey | Lisp, ML, Haskell, Erlang |
| 2007 | LOLCODE | Adam Lindsay | none (unique language) |
| 2007 | Oberon-07 | Niklaus Wirth | Oberon |
| 2007 | Swift (parallel scripting language) | University of Chicago, Argonne National Laboratory | |
| 2008 | Nim | Andreas Rumpf | Python, Lisp, Object Pascal |
| 2008 | Genie | Jamie McCracken | Python, Boo, D, Object Pascal |
| 2008 | Pure | Albert Gräf | Q |
| 2009 | Chapel | Brad Chamberlain, Cray Inc. | HPF, ZPL |
| 2009 | Go | C, Oberon, Limbo, Smalltalk | |
| 2009 | CoffeeScript | Jeremy Ashkenas | JavaScript, Ruby, Python, Haskell |
| 2009 | Idris | Edwin Brady | Haskell, Agda, Rocq |
| 2009 | Parasail | S. Tucker Taft, AdaCore | Modula, Ada, Pascal, ML |
| 2009 | Whiley | David J. Pearce | Java, C, Python |
| 2009 | Dafny | K. Rustan M. Leino | Java, Spec# |
| Year | Name | Chief developer, company | Predecessor(s) |
2010s
| Year | Name | Chief developer, company | Predecessor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | Rust | Graydon Hoare, Mozilla | Alef, C++, Camlp4, Erlang, Hermes, Limbo, Napier, Napier88, Newsqueak, NIL, Sather, Standard ML |
| 2011 | C11 | C11 ISO/IEC 9899:2011 | C99 |
| 2011 | Ceylon | Gavin King, Red Hat | Java |
| 2011 | Dart | Java, JavaScript, CoffeeScript, Go | |
| 2011 | C++11 | C++ ISO/IEC 14882:2011 | C++, Standard C, C |
| 2011 | Kotlin | JetBrains | Java, Scala, Groovy, C#, Gosu |
| 2011 | Red | Nenad Rakočević | Rebol, Scala, Lua |
| 2011 | Opa | MLstate | OCaml, Erlang, JavaScript |
| 2012 | Elixir | José Valim | Erlang, Ruby, Clojure |
| 2012 | Elm | Evan Czaplicki | Haskell, Standard ML, OCaml, F# |
| 2012 | TypeScript | Anders Hejlsberg, Microsoft | JavaScript, CoffeeScript |
| 2012 | Julia | Jeff Bezanson, Stefan Karpinski, Viral Shah, Alan Edelman, MIT | MATLAB, Lisp, C, Fortran, Mathematica[19] (strictly its Wolfram Language), Python, Perl, R, Ruby, Lua[20] |
| 2012 | P | Vivek Gupta, Ethan Jackson, Shaz Qadeer, Sriram Rajamani, Microsoft | |
| 2012 | Ada 2012 | ARA and Ada Europe (ISO/IEC 8652:2012) | Ada 2005, ISO/IEC 8652:1995/Amd 1:2007 |
| 2013 | P4 | P4 Language Consortium (P4.org) | |
| 2013 | PureScript | Phil Freeman | Haskell |
| 2013 | Hopscotch | Hopscotch Technologies | Scratch |
| 2013 | Cuneiform | Jörgen Brandt | Swift (the parallel scripting language) |
| 2013 | Lean | Microsoft Research | ML, Rocq, Haskell, Agda |
| 2013 | Hy | Paul Tagliamonte | Python, Lisp, Clojure |
| 2014 | Crystal | Ary Borenszweig, Manas Technology Solutions | Ruby, C, Rust, Go, C#, Python |
| 2014 | Hack | PHP | |
| 2014 | Swift | Apple Inc. | Objective-C, Rust, Haskell, Ruby, Python, C#, CLU |
| 2014 | C++14 | C++ ISO/IEC 14882:2014 | C++11, Standard C, C |
| 2014 | Solidity | Gavin Wood, Ethereum | JavaScript, C++, Python |
| 2015 | Raku | Larry Wall, The Rakudo Team | Perl, Haskell, Python, Ruby |
| 2015 | Zig | Andrew Kelley | C, C++, LLVM IR, Go, Rust |
| 2016 | Reason | Jordan Walke | JavaScript, OCaml[21] |
| 2016 | Ring | Mahmoud Samir Fayed | Lua, Python, Ruby, C, C#, BASIC, QML, xBase, Supernova[22] |
| 2017 | C++17 | C++ ISO/IEC 14882:2017 | C++14, Standard C, C |
| 2017 | AssemblyScript | The AssemblyScript Project[23] | JavaScript, TypeScript, WebAssembly |
| 2017 | Ballerina | WSO2, open source[24] | Java, JavaScript, Go, Rust, C# |
| 2017 | Q# | Microsoft | C#, F#, Python |
| 2018 | C17 | ISO/IEC 9899:2018 | C11 |
| 2018 | Fortran 2018 | ISO/IEC JTC1/SC22/WG5 N2150:2018 | Fortran 2008 |
| 2019 | Bosque | Mark Marron, Microsoft | JavaScript, TypeScript, ML |
| 2019 | V (Vlang) | Alexander Medvednikov | C, Go, Kotlin, Oberon, Python, Rust, Swift |
| Year | Name | Chief developer, company | Predecessor(s) |
2020s
| Year | Name | Chief developer, company | Predecessor(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | C++20 | C++ ISO/IEC 14882:2020 | C++17, Standard C, C |
| 2021 | Microsoft Power Fx | Vijay Mital, Robin Abraham, Shon Katzenberger, Darryl Rubin, Microsoft | Excel formulas |
| 2022 | Carbon | C++, Rust, Swift, Zig, Kotlin, Haskell | |
| 2023 | Mojo | Modular | Python, Rust, Cython, C, C++, CUDA, Swift, Zig |
| 2023 | Ada 2023 | ISO/IEC 8652:2023 | Ada 2012 / ISO/IEC 8652:2012 |
| 2023 | Fortran 2023 | ISO/IEC JTC1/SC22 2023 | Fortran 2018 |
| 2024 | Gleam | Louis Pilfold, Fly.io | Erlang, Elixir, Elm, Rust, Go, OCaml, JavaScript |
| 2024 | C++23 | C++ ISO/IEC 14882:2024 | C++20, Standard C, C |
| 2024 | C23 | ISO/IEC 9899:2024 | C17 |
| Year | Name | Chief developer, company | Predecessor(s) |
See also
- History of computing hardware
- History of programming languages
- Programming language
- Timeline of computing
- Timeline of programming language theory
References
External links
- Online Historical Encyclopaedia of Programming Languages
- Diagram & history of programming languages
- Eric Levenez's timeline diagram of computer languages history
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- ↑ UNIVAC conference, Charles Babbage Institute, University of Minnesota. 171-page transcript of oral history with computer pioneers, including Albert B. Tonik, involved with the Univac computer, held on 17–18 May 1990.
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