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 high-level language
LastModified: Saturday, October 26, 1996 

programming languages
A programming language such as C, FORTRAN, or Pascal that enables a programmer to write programs that are more or less independent of a particular type of computer. Such languages are considered high-level because they are closer to human languages and further from machine languages. In contrast, assembly languages are considered low-level because they are very close to machine languages.

The main advantage of high-level languages over low-level languages is that they are easier to read, write, and maintain. Ultimately, programs written in a high-level language must be translated into machine language by a compiler or interpreter.

The first high-level programming languages were designed in the 1950s. Now there are dozens of different languages, including Ada, Algol, BASIC, COBOL, C, C++, FORTRAN, LISP, Pascal, and Prolog.

  Related Links

Ada tutor home page
Provides a link to an Ada 95 tutorial and sites containing general Ada information.

related categories:

Programming Languages

related terms:

Ada

ANNA

assembly language

BASIC

C

C#

C++

COBOL

Common Language Infrastructure

compile

FORTRAN

KLOC

LISP

low-level language

machine language

object-oriented programming

Pascal

programming language







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