Procedural-based Programming
In the 1970's procedural-based programming was all the rage.
In a procedural-based programming language, a programmer writes out instructions that are followed by a computer from start to finish.
For example, a procedural-oriented program might work like this:
A more complex procedural-based program might introduce logical branches such as in the following example:
But even in the case of a more complex logical flow, the main idea remains the same ...
a certain set of instructions is followed through from beginning to end, each step builds upon and is tied to each previous step.
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Selena Sol contributes to the JavaBoutique's Introduction to Java. Selena curently works for Barclays Capital in London, one of the leading global investment banks in Europe and has worked as a software developer for the National Center for Human Genome research, Microline Software, Neuron Data, and Electric Eye in Singapore. Selena is perhaps best-known for creating the Public Domain Web Script Archive (Extropia) and writing several books on Web Programming (Perl, CGI, Java).
Email: selena@extropia.com
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