Very high-level programming language
A very high-level programming language (VHLL) is a programming language with a very high level of abstraction, used primarily as a professional programmer productivity tool.
Very high-level programming languages are usually domain-specific languages, limited to a very specific application, purpose, or type of task, and they are often scripting languages (especially extension languages), controlling a specific environment. For this reason, very high-level programming languages are often referred to as goal-oriented programming languages.
The term VHLL was used in the 1990s for what are today more often called high-level languages (not "very") used for scripting, such as Perl, Python, Ruby, and Visual Basic.[1][2]
See also
- Scripting language
- Low-level programming language
- High-level programming language
- Third-generation programming language
- Fourth-generation programming language
- Fifth-generation programming language
- Domain-specific language
References
- ↑ Tom Christiansen et al (eds.): USENIX 1994 Very High Level Languages Symposium Proceedings. October 26-28, 1994, Santa Fe, New Mexico
- ↑ "Are VHLLs Really High-Level?", by Greg Wilson, 12/01/1999
- Symposium on Very High Level Languages. SIG- PLAN Notices (ACM) 9, 4 (April 1974), 1-132.
- Teichroew, D. A survey of.languages for stating requirements for computer-based information systems. Proc. AFIPS 1972 FJCC, AFIPS Press, Montvale, N.J., pp. 1203-1224.
- Libre Software Meeting 2004
- Libre Software Meeting: Proceedings of the VHLL track (2004).
- Libre Software Meeting (2003) VHLL Track announcement
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