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On 26/08/2024 01:48, Tim Rentsch wrote:
>It's been amusing reading a discussion of which languages are or>
are not high level, without anyone offering a definition of what
the term means. Wikipedia says, roughly, that a high-level
language is one that doesn't provide machine-level access (and IMO
that is a reasonable characterization). Of course no distinction
along these lines is black and white - almost all languages have a
loophole or two - but I expect there is general agreement about
which languages clearly fail that test. In particular, any
language that offers easy access to raw memory addresses (and both
C and C++ certainly do), is not a high-level language in the
Wikipedia sense.
So, which language do you think is higher level, C++ or Python?
Where might Lisp fit in, or OCaml?
Language 'level' is a linear concept, but the various characteristics
of languages are such that there is really a multidimensional gamut.
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