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Talk:High-level programming language

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 70.62.232.146 (talk) at 21:43, 24 June 2008 (Machine code?). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

needs cleaned up

How to mark it? But it says C "was", "might be", and then "is" a high-level language. Also, PHP isn't high-level? Really? It's interpreted, reflexive, and (somewhat) Obj-oriented. If this page is really going to say it "isn't" high-level, it needs to explain *why* (not just "it's a web language"). HTML is a markup language -- neither high nor low, because it's not a programming language. It's a document, not a program. PHP, while often used for scripts, can be used to write programs performing functions just like those of a command-line C program (but with less code). So how is PHP *not* high-level?

Well, I just removed that section, because there was little of merit in it. — mæstro t/c, 11:48, 1 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]

High-level programming is slightly gay?

Not sure I am interpreting this correctly. Could someone clarify?

well to be honest it is not really possible for high-level programming to be "gay." is it?

Machine code?

anyone know how this works with machine code? Becuase I can't figure out how each instruction in high-level language corresponds to one instruction in machine code. Any one help me out?


Most higher level languages compile to assembly. The compiler interprets the high level code into assembly. However, the penalty arises from the fact that you're relying 100% on the compiler for how well it does the interpreting and optimizing.

                                                                ~Jarrod1937