Computer Science, asked by abhijeetpattanaik399, 3 months ago

what is high level language and low level language ​

Answers

Answered by ry5275521
1

Answer:

The main difference between high level language and low level language is that, Programmers can easily understand or interpret or compile the high level language in comparison of machine. ... High level language is less memory efficient. Low level language is high memory efficient.

Answered by sarita2019gautam
1

Answer:

The main difference between high level language and low level language is that, Programmers can easily understand or interpret or compile the high level language in comparison of machine. ... High level language is less memory efficient. Low level language is high memory efficient.

The main difference between high level language and low level language is that, Programmers can easily understand or interpret or compile the high level language in comparison of machine. ... High level language is less memory efficient. Low level language is high memory efficient.Explanation:

The main difference between high level language and low level language is that, Programmers can easily understand or interpret or compile the high level language in comparison of machine. ... High level language is less memory efficient. Low level language is high memory efficient.Explanation:Examples of high-level programming languages in active use today include Python, Visual Basic, Delphi, Perl, PHP, ECMAScript, Ruby, C#, Java and many others.

The main difference between high level language and low level language is that, Programmers can easily understand or interpret or compile the high level language in comparison of machine. ... High level language is less memory efficient. Low level language is high memory efficient.Explanation:Examples of high-level programming languages in active use today include Python, Visual Basic, Delphi, Perl, PHP, ECMAScript, Ruby, C#, Java and many others.A low-level programming language is a programming language that provides little or no abstraction from a computer's instruction set architecture—commands or functions in the language map closely to processor instructions. Generally, this refers to either machine code or assembly language.

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