Mnemonic comes from the Ancient Greek "Mnemones" (translates very roughly to rememberers) The Mnemones were individuals responsible for memorizing the entirety of their cities code of law.
mnemonic
assembly language
Assembly Language
mnemonic
mnemonic
in assembly language machine language instruction are replaced by English like words these words are called mnemonic
It is an assembler language programmer
No, they are not the same. Assembly language uses mnemonic words to REPRESENT machine language; to be able to actually run it, a special program - a so-called assembler - then needs to convert it into machine language.
"Little animals never go up against great elephants"
The assembler's role is most important.it converts the high level language statements into machine level language statements with the help of some operand and opcode specifications.there is first mnemonic opcode specification.here instead of writing binary opcodes,mnemonic opcodes can be specified.advantage of using mnemonic opcodes are:program becomes readable.debugging becomes simple.so it is the responsibility of the assembler to replace each mnemonic opcode by its respective binary opcode.also there is symbolic operand specification.in that,instead of specifying the addresses of instructions and data,symbols can be used.advantage of using the symbolic operand is that the program can be modified with no overhead.it is the responsibility of assembler to replace each symbol by its address.
A mnemonic code is a device by which one can remember a string of data or formulae; for instance, "My very eccentric mother just served us noodles" is a mnemonic for remembering the (now) 8 planets in the solar system in the order of their distance from the sun. Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.
to translate mnemonic operation codes to their machine language equivalents and assigning machine address to symbolic labels used by the programmer.