It is though? It's plain language that emulates sequential / procedural programming.
Following a recipe is a good example of pseudocode: it's step by step instructions on how to bake a cake, for example.
Computer's don't need to compile it, it's human readable, and if you follow the algorithm with the right inputs (ingredients & equipment) you get the right output (cake).
edit: I may not have replied to the right comment...
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"Pseudocode"? What does that mean?
Looks like code, but doesn't actually compile or run
That's not LayMan's then, that's just nonsense.
That's the equivalent of saying stuff that sounds useful, but actually isn't.
It is though? It's plain language that emulates sequential / procedural programming.
Following a recipe is a good example of pseudocode: it's step by step instructions on how to bake a cake, for example.
Computer's don't need to compile it, it's human readable, and if you follow the algorithm with the right inputs (ingredients & equipment) you get the right output (cake).
edit: I may not have replied to the right comment...