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A fourth-generation programming language (4GL) is a high-level computer programming language that belongs to a class of languages envisioned as an advancement upon third-generation programming languages (3GL).
Fourth-generation programming languages are high-level languages built around database systems. They are generally used in commercial environments. They are generally used in commercial environments. 1C:Enterprise programming language
Most constraint-based and logic programming languages and some other declarative languages are fifth-generation languages. While fourth-generation programming languages are designed to build specific programs, fifth-generation languages are designed to make the computer solve a given problem without the programmer. This way, the user only needs ...
This is a "genealogy" of programming languages. Languages are categorized under the ancestor language with the strongest influence. Those ancestor languages are listed in alphabetic order. Any such categorization has a large arbitrary element, since programming languages often incorporate major ideas from multiple sources.
Pages in category "Fourth-generation programming languages" The following 44 pages are in this category, out of 44 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
What allowed LINC to make programmers much more efficient and the application systems they produced easier to read and maintain, and differentiated it from being simply yet another third generation high level language, was LINC's assumption, use of, and total reliance on all of the facilities available, and packaged, with the Burroughs computer ...
OpenROAD, which stands for "Open Rapid Object Application Development", is a fourth-generation programming language (4GL) and development suite from Actian Corporation. It includes a suite of development tools, with built-in Integrated development environment (IDE) (Written in OpenROAD), and Code Repository.
Moore saw Forth as a successor to compile-link-go third-generation programming languages, or software for "fourth generation" hardware. He recalls how the name was coined: [15] At Mohasco ["in the late 1960s"] I also worked directly on an IBM 1130 interfaced with an IBM 2250 graphics display. The 1130 was a very important computer: it had the ...