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machine language |
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machine languageor machine codeElemental language of computers, consisting of a string of 0s and 1s. Because machine language is the lowest-level computer language and the only language that computers directly understand, a program written in a more sophisticated language (e.g., C, Pascal) must be converted to machine language prior to execution. This is done via a compiler or assembler. The resulting binary file (also called an executable file) can then be executed by the CPU. See also assembly language. machine languageThe native language of the computer. In order for a program to run, it must be presented to the computer as binary-coded machine instructions that are specific to that CPU model or family. Although programmers are sometimes able to modify machine language in order to fix a running program, they do not create it. Machine language is created by programs called "assemblers," "compilers" and "interpreters," which convert the lines of programming code a human writes into the machine language the computer understands. machine language [mə′shēn ‚laŋ·gwij] (computer science) The set of instructions available to a particular digital computer, and by extension the format of a computer program in its final form, capable of being executed by a computer.
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| The machine language translation challenge was different again. The subject of sentient human bodies, when it enters, is typically clothed in the neutered, modernist, and objectifying machine language of "population," "production," and "reproduction. At one of our meetings we were told that the president of our Machine Language Users Group was going to have to resign: his mother wanted him to devote more time to his junior-high studies. |
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