Very high-level programming language explained

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.

VHLLs 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 programming languages (not "very") used for scripting, such as Perl, Python, PHP, Ruby, and Visual Basic.[1] [2]

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Tom Christiansen et al (eds.): USENIX 1994 Very High Level Languages Symposium Proceedings. October 26–28, 1994, Santa Fe, New Mexico
  2. Web site: Are VHLLs Really High-Level? . Greg . Wilson . 1999-12-01 . oreilly.com . O'Reilly . https://web.archive.org/web/20180424230256/http://archive.oreilly.com/pub/a/oreilly/news/vhll_1299.html . 2018-04-24 .