Yo my friend slow that roll. You are repeating femoid propaganda.
Ada Lovelace did not "invent" coding. Firstly, someone else came up with the idea of a 'self-programing machine', but as it wasn't translated to english until about a hundred years after her death, its unlikely she was influenced by their work. Secondly, Ada's "language" - in addition being developed for a machine that never existed (and in fact could never exist without significant redesigns to the point the "working examples" made in modern times bare only a passing outward relation. Babbage was a head of his time with the idea, don't get me wrong, but his difference engine could not work as drawn)
Also, while Lovelace had come up with the idea of many things we see in programming languages today, the creators of the early languages had never heard of the bitch and redeveloped all of her best concepts in a case of convergent evolution.
Margaret Hamilton wasn't the lead programmer. She was the QA bitch who had to check all the numbers by hand, and her program was obsolete by the time the missions launch. What she's standing next two in the famous photo is NASA secondary, fall-back, triple check.
Now, before your hormones get you out all out whack, mainly I'm calling you out because you left off the baddest bitch:
Grace Hopper.
Unlike Lovelace, who developed the concept of something that would need much refinement, Grace Hopper developed the first Linker. For people who have known the the touch of a woman, a Linker is a necessary component of a compiler that allows a program to track the location of abstract objects (resources, variables, etc) and allows for programs to reference those resources in abstract instead of by absolute.
Grave developed this despite being told such a thing was impossible.
She also did work, as part of a team, on the "A" compiler.
Grace's real advancements to computing were not from actually writing code.
First, Grace wrote a paper about the importance of programming languages using understandable symbols, instead of algorithms that required advanced mathematical degrees to interpret.
Second, Grace was promoted to management, which is where Grace really made her greatest contributions.
Remembering all the resistance she received, Grace was extremely supportive of the teams she managed. She also had very low ego and wasn't threatened by smart, talented, or dedicated underlings. She allowed her people to learn and grow, instead of swamping them with management pushback. Grace was good programmer, but she was an AMAZING boss.
However, leftists and 'moids don't like to talk about Grace, because Grace was a member of the US Navy. It addition to praising a member of the US military being VERY haram, discussing her achievements means acknowledging the ways the US military has enhanced human knowledge, so double-plus haram.
(Also spot on with Hedy. She came up with the idea of frequency hopping and the mechanism by which it could be achieved. She did everything but actually build the device.)