C (programming language): Difference between revisions

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==Syntax==
==Syntax==


Many basic characteristics of C syntax, along with its stack-based scope behavior, have been adopted by several subsequent programming languages, including C++, Java, Javascript, C# and (to some extent) Ruby.  The adopted characteristics tend to include case sensitivity, ending of statements with a semi-colon (;), use of { } to enclose blocks of code, and allowing temporary variables to be declared inside blocks or procedures (which are semantically destroyed subsequent to that procedure's execution, and reinitialized from scratch during subsequent procedure executions).
Many basic characteristics of C syntax, along with its stack-based scope behavior, have been adopted by several subsequent programming languages, including [[C++]], [[Java]], [[Javascript]], [[C_sharp|C#]] and (to some extent) [[Ruby_programming_language|Ruby]].  The adopted characteristics tend to include case sensitivity, ending of statements with a semi-colon (;), use of { } to enclose blocks of code, and allowing temporary variables to be declared inside blocks or procedures (which are semantically destroyed subsequent to that procedure's execution, and reinitialized from scratch during subsequent procedure executions).


===Hello World===
===Hello World===

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For other uses, see C (disambiguation).

C is a general-purpose, procedural computer programming language which is still in use more than thirty years after its creation. C was developed in 1972 by Dennis Ritchie and Brian Kernighan (then of Bell Laboratories) for use with the Unix operating system[1]. The language was later implemented for many different computer platforms and has been standardized by ANSI and ISO. As of 2007, versions of C are still used, especially for writing operating system software and embedded programs (for gadgets such as smart phones). The syntax and scope rules of C were also adopted by several later programming languages, including C++, Java, and C#. Javascript uses similar syntax but has different scope rules.

Syntax

Many basic characteristics of C syntax, along with its stack-based scope behavior, have been adopted by several subsequent programming languages, including C++, Java, Javascript, C# and (to some extent) Ruby. The adopted characteristics tend to include case sensitivity, ending of statements with a semi-colon (;), use of { } to enclose blocks of code, and allowing temporary variables to be declared inside blocks or procedures (which are semantically destroyed subsequent to that procedure's execution, and reinitialized from scratch during subsequent procedure executions).

Hello World

#include <stdio.h>

int main(void) {
   printf("Hello, world!\n");
   return 0;
}

Analysis of the example

The Hello World program (see above) appears in many programming languages books and articles as a cursory introduction into a language's syntax. It was introduced in the book The C Programming Language[1].

#include <stdio.h> tells the precompiler to include the contents of the header file stdio.h, which declares standard input and output functions into the program before compiling.

int main(void) { tells the compiler that there is a function named main which expects no parameters (void) and will return an integer number to the caller (int). Due to a standard convention of the language, main is the first function called after the execution environment of the program has been set up. The opening curly brace following int main(void) denotes the beginning of the function.

printf("Hello, world!\n"); will make the program output Hello, world! and a new line (\n) on the screen. printf is itself a function similar to main but predefined in a library (libc) and linked into the program at compile time or runtime. The trailing semicolon is the end of statement marker in C.

return 0; defines the value to be returned from main and leaves the function back to its caller, some standard C startup code. After some additional cleanup that code will pass the 0 on to the operating system, to which it means 'success'.

} signals the end of the function definition to the compiler.

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Kernighan, B. and Ritchie, D.: The C Programming Language. Prentice Hall, 1978.
    • The original language definition before standardization.