Computer Science, asked by naveeenmankoti1234, 4 months ago

assembly language use symbolic codes called​

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Answered by Anonymous
3

Explanation:

Instructions (statements) in assembly language are generally very simple, unlike those in high-level languages. Generally, a mnemonic is a symbolic name for a single executable machine language instruction (an opcode), and there is at least one opcode mnemonic defined for each machine language instruction.

Answered by MrInocent
3

Answer:

Instructions (statements) in assembly language are generally very simple, unlike those in high-level languages. Generally, a mnemonic is a symbolic name for a single executable machine language instruction (an opcode), and there is at least one opcode mnemonic defined for each machine language instruction.

Explanation:

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