OpenEdge Advanced Business Language
0 sources
OpenEdge Advanced Business Language
Summary
OpenEdge Advanced Business Language is a 4th-generation programming language[1]. It draws 53 Wikipedia views per month (4th_generation_programming_language category, ranking #2 of 14).[2]
Key Facts
- OpenEdge Advanced Business Language's instance of is recorded as 4th-generation programming language[3].
- OpenEdge Advanced Business Language's instance of is recorded as programming language[4].
- OpenEdge Advanced Business Language's instance of is recorded as object-based language[5].
- OpenEdge Advanced Business Language's developer is recorded as Progress Software[6].
- OpenEdge Advanced Business Language's software version identifier is recorded as 12.2[7].
- OpenEdge Advanced Business Language's software version identifier is recorded as 12.6[8].
- OpenEdge Advanced Business Language's has use is recorded as relational database[9].
- OpenEdge Advanced Business Language's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/043fdy[10].
- OpenEdge Advanced Business Language's official website is recorded as https://www.progress.com/openedge[11].
- OpenEdge Advanced Business Language's readable file format is recorded as OpenEdge ABL source code file[12].
- OpenEdge Advanced Business Language's writable file format is recorded as OpenEdge ABL source code file[13].
- OpenEdge Advanced Business Language's Stack Exchange tag is recorded as https://stackoverflow.com/tags/openedge[14].
- OpenEdge Advanced Business Language's programming paradigm is recorded as object-oriented programming[15].
- OpenEdge Advanced Business Language's ESCO skill ID is recorded as 300d432b-f457-4cd3-9cb1-1858c7d14954[16].
Body
Designation and Status
Recorded instance of include 4th-generation programming language[3], programming language[4], and object-based language[5].
Why It Matters
OpenEdge Advanced Business Language draws 53 Wikipedia views per month (4th_generation_programming_language category, ranking #2 of 14).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[17] It is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[18]