Depending on context (as always), both are possible.
Hello there;
would anyone kindly explain the difference between can+have+pp and could+have+pp
"she can't have missed out on the program."
"she couldn't have missed out on the program."
Depending on context (as always), both are possible.
Remember - correct capitalisation, punctuation and spacing make posts much easier to read.
Note that we don't normally use 'can have + pp' in the positive. So you can use "could have + pp".
With the negative, "couldn't have" implies some sort of conditionality. In many cases, there's no real difference.