Printing “Hello World” on the console ( monitor ) is where most of the present senior programmers started once. When you are taking an online course, or learning a programming language for the first time, “Hello World” program is where you are most likely to start. So, today we will print the words ‘ Hello World ‘ on console using 27 different programming languages. I assume this article would help you distinguish how a program syntax changes from one programming language to another. Here we go starting with the Legendary C language:
1. C
#include int main() { printf("Hello, World"); return(0); }
2. C++
#include int main() { std::cout << "Hello, World"; return 0; }
3. C#
using System; class Program { public static void Main(string[] args) { Console.WriteLine("Hello, World"); } }
4. Bash
echo "Hello, World"
5. Basic
PRINT "Hello, World"
6. HTML
Hello, World
7. Java
public class Main { public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println("Hello, World!"); } }
8. Clipper
? "Hello, World"
9. Delphi
program HelloWorld; begin Writeln('Hello, World'); end.
10. CoffeeScript
console.log 'Hello, World'
11. MatLab
disp('Hello, World')
12. Julia
println("Hello, World")
13. JavaScript
document.write('Hello, World');
14. Logo
print [Hello, World]
15. jQuery
$("body").append("Hello, World");
16. Perl 5
print "Hello, World";
17. Pascal
program HelloWorld; begin WriteLn('Hello, World'); end.
18. Objective-C
#import #import int main(void) { NSLog(@"Hello, World"); return 0; }
19. Visual Basic .NET
Module Module1 Sub Main() Console.WriteLine("Hello, World") End Sub End Module
20. R
cat('Hello, World')
21. VBScript
MsgBox "Hello, World"
22. XSLT
Hello, World
23. Processing
void setup(){ println("Hello, World"); }
24. Ruby
puts "Hello, World"
25. Swift
print("Hello, World")
26. Python
print ("Hello, World")
I started my programming days with my first program in C which is printing ” Hello, World “on monitor. What was your first program ? Comment Below
If there are any errors in the code mentioned above, feel free to mention the in the comment section.
print (" Happy Coding! ")
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