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Due to the highly [[Proprietary software|proprietary]] nature of robot [[software]], most manufacturers of robot hardware also provide their own software. While this is not unusual in other automated [[control systems]], the lack of standardization of programming methods for robots does pose certain challenges. For example, there are over 30 different manufacturers of [[industrial robots]], so there are also 30 different robot programming languages required. There are enough similarities between the different robots that it is possible to gain a broad-based understanding of robot programming without having to learn each manufacturer's proprietary language.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://coro.etsmtl.ca/blog/?p=529|title=The future of robot off-line programming|date=2015-10-25|newspaper=CoRo Blog|access-date=2017-01-03}}</ref>
One method of controlling robots from multiple manufacturers is to use a [[Post processor]] and [[Off-line programming (robotics)]] software. With this method, it is possible to handle brand-specific robot programming language from a universal programming language, such as [[Python (programming language)]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://
Some examples of published robot programming languages are shown below.
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