Programming language

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Revision as of 11:48, 20 April 2007 by imported>Paul Derry
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A programming language is a human readable lexicon and grammar of instructions that a programmer uses to instruct a computer how to behave.

Programs written in a programming language typically have to be translated into a code the central processing unit (CPU) can understand and execute machine code. The programming language allows the programmer to define data structures and combine them with logic and procedural instructions. Generally a programming language reflects the state of development of the hardware and its processing power.

Programming languages can generally be divided into two categories:

Compiled languages must first be translated by a compiler from human readable source code to an object code. A linker is often applied to this code to assemble it with existing libraries and runtime environments into a form the computer can run.

Interpreted languages rely on an application, the interpreter, that translates the (sometimes human readable) source code into machine code through pre-existing interfaces. For example, an interpreter would read a line such as this: PRINT "Cookies are yummy!" and call the predefined, platform independent function PRINT inside the interpreter itself where the interpreter then executes the platform dependent function call.

See Also

List of programming languages