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High-Level Language

A machine-independent programming language, such as FORTRAN, COBOL, BASIC, Pascal and C/C++. It lets the programmer concentrate on the logic of the problem to be solved rather than the intricacies of the machine architecture such as is required with low-level assembly languages.

There are dramatic differences between high-level languages. Look up the terms C, BASIC and COBOL, and review the sample code. What is considered high level depends on the era. There were assembly languages thirty years ago that were easier to understand than C.

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Low-Level Language
A programming language that is very close to machine language. All assembly languages are low-level languages. Contrast with high-level language.

2006-06-13 00:46:30 · answer #1 · answered by jamshed007us 3 · 0 1

actually there are many levels but i guess programmers are 3 levels:

1 . beginner in visual basic and c++ and java ....etc
2 . moderate who can write databases in visual basic ,c++ java
3 . Elites programmers and sometimes hackers they know both
high level languages (visual basic , visual c ....etc) and the
old low level languages (as an example :ASSEMBLY )

For me i learned vb ,vb.net ,visual c++,pascal,fortran,basic,java script , and now i am trying to learn html and The ASSEMBLY LANGUAGE THAT IS HARD FOR HUMAN MINDS ('.--.')

2006-06-13 07:34:37 · answer #2 · answered by Kerov Rickardo 2 · 0 0

ther is no level in programming language

2006-06-13 07:26:16 · answer #3 · answered by raj 1 · 0 0

C,C++,Java, oracle etc

2006-06-13 07:27:00 · answer #4 · answered by raja 1 · 0 0

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