Java and C# are all examples of high-level programming languages. High level programming languages separate the programmer from the machine through abstraction, allowing them to focus more upon the software rather than the underlying hardware, which is taken care of by a compiler and/or interpreter. The higher the level of abstraction, the less interaction there is with the machine itself. Java, for instance, has no low-level functionality whatsoever as all code is written against a virtual machine. This makes the language extremely portable as programs can be run on any machine with a Java virtual machine implementation, without any modification to the compiled byte code. The Java virtual machine is essentially an interpreter that translates the byte code to machine code.
Assembly and machine code are low-level languages. Before there were any languages, all code had to be written in machine code (long sequences of 1s and 0s), which was highly prone to error. Assembly language was the first programming language, and was used to make it easier to produce machine code. As such, every platform has its own version of assembler. As such, programs written in assembler or machine code are non-portable.
Mid level languages include C and C++. Both are really high-level languages as they can both be used to write portable code, but the amount of abstraction in C is almost non-existent because much of C can be mapped almost 1:1 with the resulting assembly, but with enough abstraction to make it much easier to work with. C++ is backwardly-compatible with C but is more flexible because the programmer can use as much or as little abstraction as required, giving the best of both worlds.
Examples of popular high-level programming languages include BASIC, C, C++, C#, COBOL, Lisp, Pascal (and variants like Delphi and Object Pascal), Forth (a stack-based Reverse Polish Notation language), Fortran, Java (for which native-code compilers exist) and Scheme.
ADA, FORTRAN, COBOL, C, C++, P/L-1, Java, LISP,RUBY,JAVA SCRIPT,PYTHON,SCHEME, PROLOG,C#,ETC........
java , .net, cobol
Java, PHP, Visual Basic etc.
Pick any four from the attached link.
LISP programming refers to creating applications using LISP languages - a family of old high level programming languages that used Polish notation. LISP languages are the second oldest HLLs after FORTRAN.
computer language translators are programming tools that translate high level languages into the machine language. they include:1)assembler-translates assembly language into machine language. 2)compiler-translates the high level languages into the machine language.
C and Ada
Because C is one of the high level programming languages. Other examples: Pascal, Fortran, List, JavaScript, APL
High-level and low-level.
They get compiled or interpreted to machine code which computer can understand.
Examples: Algol, Cobol, Fortran, PL/I, Basic
High level languages cant be understood by the computer as it performs all tasks in binary form. So its necessary to convert high level language into machine oriented language
You can program a computer using any of thousands of high-level or low-level languages, exen directly in binary (the only thing a computer can truly read). Do a little research on some of the more popular, high-level languages, such as C++, C, and JAVA.
Pick any four from the attached link.
The term high-level refers to the amount of abstraction between the code you write and the native language of the machine. Low-level code is a symbolic code that maps 1:1 with the machine code, thus assembly is a low-level language. All other languages that employ a compiler or interpreter to create the machine code are considered high level languages. However, C and C++ are examples of high-level languages that also allow low-level programming, and are often called mid-level languages for that reason.
Languages are usually classified at two levels, low level programming and high level programming, although some experts also make a distinction of very high level languages and very low level languages. So, depending on who you ask, there are either two, three, or four. The most common set is probably three: low, high, and very high.
High-level languages are programming languages that are closer to human language than machine code, making them easier for programmers to read, write, and maintain. Examples of high-level languages include Python, Java, C++, and Ruby.
C and C++ are both high-level programming languages.
LISP programming refers to creating applications using LISP languages - a family of old high level programming languages that used Polish notation. LISP languages are the second oldest HLLs after FORTRAN.
No, high-level programming languages do that.