business language - significado y definición. Qué es business language
Diclib.com
Diccionario ChatGPT
Ingrese una palabra o frase en cualquier idioma 👆
Idioma:

Traducción y análisis de palabras por inteligencia artificial ChatGPT

En esta página puede obtener un análisis detallado de una palabra o frase, producido utilizando la mejor tecnología de inteligencia artificial hasta la fecha:

  • cómo se usa la palabra
  • frecuencia de uso
  • se utiliza con más frecuencia en el habla oral o escrita
  • opciones de traducción
  • ejemplos de uso (varias frases con traducción)
  • etimología

Qué (quién) es business language - definición

BUSINESS APPLICATION DEVELOPMENT LANGUAGE
Progress4GL; Webspeed; Progress 4GL; OpenEdge Advance Business Language (ABL); OpenEdge Advanced Business Language (ABL); OpenEdge Database; Advanced Business Language; OpenEdge ABL; Progress (software); Progress RDBMS; Progress DBMS

COmmon Business Oriented Language         
PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE WITH ENGLISH-LIKE SYNTAX
CoBoL; COBOL programming language; COBOL language; Cobol; COBOL (programming language); MF-COBOL; Picture clause; RM/COBOL; Common Ordinary Business-Oriented Language; 88 level; Common Business-Oriented Language; PICTURE; Named condition; X3J4; Common Business Oriented Language; COBOL-74; COBOL-85; COBOL 2002; COBOL-68; COBOL74; COBOL 1974; COBOL85; COBOL 85; COBOL 1985; COBOL68; COBOL 68; COBOL 1968; COBOL 74; OO COBOL; O-O COBOL; OO-COBOL; COBOL 20XX; COBOL 1960; COBOL 60; COBOL-60; ISO/IEC 1989; COBOL 2014; Criticism of COBOL; ISO 1989; User:Esquivalience/GAReview/COBOL; COmmon Business-Oriented Language; Object-oriented COBOL; Data types in COBOL
<language, business> /koh'bol/ (COBOL) A programming language for simple computations on large amounts of data, designed by the CODASYL Committee in April 1960. COBOL's {natural language} style is intended to be largely self-documenting. It introduced the record structure. COBOL was probably the most widely used programming language during the 1960s and 1970s. Many of the major programs that required repair or replacement due to Year 2000 {software rot} issues were originally written in COBOL, and this was responsible for a short-lived increased demand for COBOL programmers. Even in 2002 though, new COBOL programs are still being written in some organisations and many old COBOL programs are still running in dinosaur shops. Major revisions in 1968 (ANS X3.23-1968), 1974 (ANS X3.23-1974) and 1985. Usenet newsgroup: news:comp.lang.cobol. ["Initial Specifications for a Common Business Oriented Language" DoD, US GPO, Apr 1960]. (2002-02-21)
Web Services Business Process Execution Language         
LANGUAGE FOR SPECIFYING ACTIONS WITHIN BUSINESS PROCESSES WITH WEB SERVICES
BPEL4WS; WS-BPEL; XLANG; BPEL; Xlang; Bpel4ws; BPEL4People; WS-BPEL Extension for People; Bpel; Process choreography; IBM Web Services Flow Language; Web Services Business Process Execution Language
<programming> (WSBPEL, BPEL4WS) An OASIS technical committee considering ways to enable users to describe {business processes} as web services and define how they can be connected to accomplish specific tasks. http://oasis-open.org/committees/tc_home.php?wg_abbrev=wsbpel. (2006-08-15)
Business process         
COLLECTION OF RELATED, STRUCTURED ACTIVITIES OR TASKS THAT PRODUCE A SPECIFIC SERVICE OR PRODUCT (SERVE A PARTICULAR GOAL) FOR A PARTICULAR CUSTOMER OR CUSTOMERS
Business processes; Business Process; Business Processes; Process(business); Business engineering; Business method; Business methods; Methods of doing business; Method of doing business; Business Engineering; Pin Factory; Process (business); Commercial process; Business function; Business functions
A business process, business method or business function is a collection of related, structured activities or tasks by people or equipment in which a specific sequence produces a service or product (serves a particular business goal) for a particular customer or customers. Business processes occur at all organizational levels and may or may not be visible to the customers.

Wikipedia

OpenEdge Advanced Business Language

OpenEdge Advanced Business Language, or OpenEdge ABL for short, is a business application development language created and maintained by Progress Software Corporation (PSC). The language, typically classified as a fourth-generation programming language, uses an English-like syntax to simplify software development. The language was called PROGRESS or Progress 4GL up until version 9, but in 2006 PSC changed the name to OpenEdge Advanced Business Language (OpenEdge ABL) in order to overcome a presumed industry perception that 4GLs were less capable than other languages. A subset of the language, called SpeedScript, is used in the development of web applications.

OpenEdge ABL helps developers to develop applications optionally using its own integrated relational database and programming tool. These applications are portable across computing systems and allow access to various popular data sources without having to learn the underlying data access methods. This means that the end-user of these products can be unaware of the underlying architecture.

By combining a fourth generation language and relational database, OpenEdge ABL allows the use of the Rapid Application Development (RAD) model for developing software. A programmer and even end users can do rapid prototyping using the integrated and GUI tools of the development environment.

OpenEdge can be used for:

  • Microsoft Windows GUI (Graphical User Interface)
  • WWW Programming (UNIX and Windows)
  • CHUI (CHaracter User Interface) (UNIX and Windows)
  • JSON and XML appserver programming (UNIX and Windows)
  • as well background process programming (UNIX and Windows).
Ejemplos de uso de business language
1. After all, the French seem to have had the worst deal in the globalised marketplace of business language.
2. He replied that English was the working language of that particular session and the accepted business language of Europe today.
3. "They‘re definitely interested in Chinese because they think it is the business language of tomorrow." Bookmark with: Delicious Digg reddit Facebook StumbleUpon What are these?
4. Business language A French official said Mr Seilliere he was interrupted by Mr Chirac, who asked him in French why on earth he was speaking English.
5. Literally a few days after Putin officially took office an operation began that, in business language, is called a hostile takeover.