C#
- 7 votes357 views1 answer
- 7 votes306 views1 answer
- 7 votes333 views1 answer
- 7 votes290 views5 answers
- 7 votes340 views2 answers
- 7 votes309 views6 answers
- 7 votes312 views2 answers
- 7 votes342 views2 answers
- 7 votes307 views2 answers
- 7 votes339 views1 answer
- 7 votes342 views2 answers
- 7 votes308 views1 answer
- 7 votes354 views1 answer
- 7 votes343 views2 answers
- 7 votes351 views4 answers
- 7 votes311 views4 answers
- 7 votes371 views2 answers
- 7 votes315 views2 answers
- 7 votes329 views1 answer
- 7 votes317 views2 answers
- 7 votes315 views2 answers
- 7 votes340 views2 answers
- 7 votes322 views1 answer
- 7 votes317 views3 answers
- 7 votes316 views3 answers
C (pronounced "See", like the letter C) is a general-purpose computer programming language created by Dennis Ritchie at Bell Telephone Laboratories between 1969 and 1973 for use with the UNIX operating system operating system. Its architecture enables structures that translate efficiently to conventional machine instructions, and as a result, it has found long-term use in applications previously developed in assembly language.
It is a very efficient procedural programming language emphasizing functions, whereas newer object-oriented programming languages tend to emphasize data.
The C programming language was built on the older programming languages B, BCPL, and CPL.
The C language and its optional library are standardized as ISO/IEC 9899, with the most recent version being ISO/IEC 9899:2018. (C17).
N2176 is a free draft version.