Isn’t it B?
this post was submitted on 20 Jul 2023
1 points (100.0% liked)
Trivia
233 readers
1 users here now
A place to quiz others with trivia questions related to the instance!
Please keep questions on the topic of trivia. If you have a question for how to do something please post it in a community relevant to what youre doing or !no_stupid_questions@programming.dev
Guidelines
- Keep questions related to the instance!
- Post the answer in the comments around one day after you posted the question to give people enough time to give their answers
- If you are answering the question do not look it up on search engines. You are only cheating yourself out of having fun. If its obvious someone looked up the answer the comment will be deleted to prevent spoiling it
Credits
Logo base by Delapouite under CC BY 3.0 with modifications to add a gradient
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
Yep
I feel down a rabbit hole, a few years ago wonder the same thing about C#. Here is what I found.
- C# was developed in 2000 as a successor to C++. Doubling the ++ to a #.
- C++ was developed in the early 80s as a successor to C. Adding plus (+) to a name was a common way of indicating it was an enhancement. Also ++ is the incrementing operator for C.
- C was developed in the early 70s as a successor to the B programming language. C comes after B.
- B was developed in 1969 and was derived from the BCPL language. Basically, B was a stripped down version of BCPL.
- BCPL (Basic Combined Programming Language) was developed in 1967 and was a designed as an simpler version of CPL.
- CPL (Combined Programming Language) was developed in the early 60s at Cambridge. The original name was "Cambridge Programming Language" but was changed to Combined when it was published jointly with the University of London.