On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 10:37 PM, David Liguori <liguorid@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Any language (whatever be it is), I think finally is processed in the same way as is C or Fortran, though that is a different thing if some language is already written in C!
It is the name of the book?
But higher-level languages like C and Fortran ultimately produce a stream of ones and
zeros that correspond to these instructions, source and target
registers, and data.
Any language (whatever be it is), I think finally is processed in the same way as is C or Fortran, though that is a different thing if some language is already written in C!
Then, for an amusing read which may or may not tell you anything about
how a computer works, try Douglas Hofstadter's "Goedel, Escher, Bach: an
Eternal Golden Braid".
It is the name of the book?
The books by Deitel and Deitel probably have everything you need to know.
But what is the name of the book? Is it something like 'Programing in C' (e.g., one excellent book by K&R)!
--
Regards,
Parshwa Murdia
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