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  1. C (programming language) - Wikipedia

    C[c] is a general-purpose programming language. It was created in the 1970s by Dennis Ritchie and remains widely used and influential. By design, C exposes to the programmer relatively …

  2. C (programming language) - Simple English Wikipedia, the free …

    The C programming language is a computer programming language developed in the early 1970s by Ken Thompson and Dennis Ritchie at Bell Labs. They used it to improve the UNIX …

  3. Operators in C and C++ - Wikipedia

    C and C++ have the same logical operators and all can be overloaded in C++. Note that overloading logical AND and OR is discouraged, because as overloaded operators they …

  4. C syntax - Wikipedia

    C syntax is the form that text must have in order to be C programming language code. The language syntax rules are designed to allow for code that is terse, has a close relationship with …

  5. C data types - Wikipedia

    The C language provides the four basic arithmetic type specifiers char, int, float and double (as well as the boolean type bool), and the modifiers signed, unsigned, short, and long.

  6. C - Wikipedia

    C, or c, is the third letter of the Latin alphabet, used in the modern English alphabet, the alphabets of other western European languages and others worldwide.

  7. The C Programming Language - Wikipedia

    The C Programming Language (sometimes termed K&R, after its authors' initials) is a computer programming book written by Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie, the latter of whom originally …

  8. C standard library - Wikipedia

    The C standard library, sometimes referred to as libc, [1] is the standard library for the C programming language, as specified in the ISO C standard. [2] Starting from the original ANSI …

  9. Ç - Wikipedia

    Ç or ç (C-cedilla) is a Latin script letter used in the Albanian, Azerbaijani, Manx, Tatar, Turkish, Turkmen, Kurdish, Kazakh, and Romance alphabets. Romance languages that use this letter …

  10. Why the C programming language still rules - InfoWorld

    The C language has been a programming staple for decades. Here’s how it stacks up against C++, Java, C#, Go, Rust, Python, and the newest kid on the block—Carbon.