When learning a computer language a good place to start is by writing a program that says, "Hello World".
Languages vary in how you write a string of characters to be printed as a line.
Languages vary in how you print a string to output.
Languages vary in how you surround your program with extra words and punctuation to make it complete.
Languages vary in how you run a program once created. Even within a language there are many variations here, especially with advanced editors and build systems.
In C, one would use a text editor to create a program, hi.c that contained the lines,
#include<stdio.h> int main () { printf("hello world\n"); }
In C, one could compile and run this program with the shell commands,
$ cc hi.c $ ./a.out
In Ruby, one could combine all of these pieces into one command line,
$ruby -e 'puts "hello world"'
Many details of interacting with editors, compilers and runtimes will have been demonstrated once one completes Hello World.
See examples in many languages.
See also Random Hello World