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BASIC: A Computer Programming Language




Computer programming has its own language, and that's just the beginning of the software adventure. There are many different languages in computer programming, and all of them have their own purposes. To understand the importance of computer programming languages, knowing them and tweaking them, one has to understand the importance of computer programming. Computer programming produces software packages, among other things, to meet our needs. We may need software for accounting, enlarging or shrinking photos, or editing home videos. Behind all these software packages are computer programmers who use their individual languages to create software.


One such computer programming language is the Beginner's All-Purpose Symbolic Instruction Code, or BASIC. BASIC is actually composed of many different kinds of programming languages that are higher level than most other languages. This BASIC family of computer programming languages was first designed in the 1960s and was originally made for non-science people to gain better access to computers. During that time, using a computer required a person to write customized software, a task that only mathematicians and scientists were equipped to do. The BASIC language was therefore a bridge for people of other professions to take advantage of the power of computers.


When the 1970s came, the BASIC language, whether in its original form or a variant of it, spread onto microcomputers. By the 1980s, even home computers could run BASIC. Today, BASIC remains popular as it serves as the basis for many of the more modern programming languages that have been developed in the wake of advanced operating systems and the Internet.


When it was originally conceived, BASIC was meant for beginners. It was a language that people could use easily, whether or not they were educated in mathematics and the sciences. The language also had to be a general-purpose one, in that it had to serve many different needs, not only those that mathematicians and scientists required. The root language of BASIC also had to allow for advanced features to be plugged in as experts grew more adept, and as the language found further use in many other fields. BASIC was also meant to be interactive and designed to show error messages that were clear and friendly; these error messages had to explain completely what the problem was, which would hopefully allow the user to fix it faster and easier.


When it was first released, BASIC was free of charge, which allowed the language to spread much faster. Once the language spread, it was also easy to modify it and correct errors. BASIC was also distributed to a few high schools to promote it faster. Thanks to this widespread use of the language, BASIC was soon implemented on several microcomputers and by several software manufacturers.


Despite its success, BASIC has had its dissenters. Some programmers find that its scripts do not show proper programming practices, and the language itself is too slow or sometimes even too simple. Despite all these, however, BASIC has continued to thrive, succeed, and evolve, and has thus become a good tool to introduce beginner programmers to the concept of coding and computer programming.


These are only a few facts about the BASIC language. For more information on BASIC, read and do your research through several key pages online or using computer programming books.


 

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