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         Cpp:     more books (100)
  1. C Programming Language (2nd Edition) by Brian W. Kernighan, Dennis M. Ritchie, 1988-04-01
  2. Programming in Objective-C 2.0 (2nd Edition) by Stephen G. Kochan, 2009-01-08
  3. Programming in C (3rd Edition) by Stephen G. Kochan, 2004-07-18
  4. C Programming: A Modern Approach, 2nd Edition by K. N. King, 2008-04-19
  5. Practical C Programming, 3rd Edition by Steve Oualline, 1997-08-01
  6. Expert C Programming by Peter van der Linden, 1994-06-24
  7. Absolute Beginner's Guide to C (2nd Edition) by Greg Perry, 1994-04-18
  8. C Programming for the Absolute Beginner by Michael Vine, 2007-10-11
  9. C All-in-One Desk Reference for Dummies by Dan Gookin, 2004-09-03
  10. Programming in Objective-C 2.0 (3rd Edition) (Developer's Library) by Stephen G. Kochan, 2011-02-05
  11. The C Answer Book (2nd Edition) by Clovis L. Tondo, Scott E. Gimpel, 1988-11-11
  12. Introduction to C Programming with a little OpenGL Graphics for fun by Robert P. Cook, 2008-08-19
  13. Programming in the Key of C#: A Primer for Aspiring Programmers (Step By Step (Microsoft)) by Petzold Charles, Charles Petzold, 2003-08-01
  14. Linux System Programming: Talking Directly to the Kernel and C Library by Robert Love, 2007-09-18

1. Programming In C
deliberations of X3J11, the Technical Committee charged by ANSI with devising a standard for the c programming language.''
http://www.lysator.liu.se/c
ANSI History Culture Literature ... What's new? ANSI C
ISO/IEC JTC1/SC22/WG14 and N843, the official committee document
The first chain of abbreviations is the committee responsible for maintaining and updating the C language definition; the second, N843, designates the Final Committee Draft of what will one day be the next C standard. As usual, there are versions in gzipped PostScript and gzipped Adobe Acrobat format
hyperlinked version of N794
, a slightly earlier draft.
A brief description of Normative Addendum 1, by Clive Feather
This work - 4 years in the doing - has culminated in Normative Addendum 1.
Normative Changes to ISO/IEC 9899:1990 in Technical Corrigendum 1
Four years after the adoption of the ANSI C standard as an International Standard in 1990, answers to the first batch of defect reports have been formally accepted: the C standard has changed.
Paul Eggert summarizes Technical Corrigendum 2
ISO C Technical Corrigendum 2 (TC2) has been approved. Even leaner than its predecessor TC1, it consists only of small changes in response to Defect Reports, and will be of interest mostly to compiler and test suite vendors.
Instant C9x: Doug Gwyn's Q8
``Aside: Why "Q8"? That was used as a system external symbol prefix in old CDC Fortran implementations, to avoid link-time name-space collisions with user-defined symbols, on the assumption that no user would ever think of using such a name.''

2. Programming In C
Programming in C UNIX System Calls and Subroutines using CCategory Computers Programming Languages C Source Code......Programming in C UNIX System Calls and Subroutines using C,. Make Programming;Creating a makefile; Make macros; Running Make. Program Listings hello.c;
http://www.cs.cf.ac.uk/Dave/C/CE.html

3. Introduction To C Programming: Computer Centre: University Of Leicester
Introduction to c programming So you want to learn C?
http://www.le.ac.uk/cc/iss/tutorials/cprog/cccc.html
Computer Centre
Introduction to C Programming
So you want to learn C We hope to provide you with an easy step by step guide to programming in C . The course is split up into several sections, or lessons, which include C example programs for you to demonstrate what has been taught. Although the ordering of the sections does not have to be strictly followed, the sections become progressively more involved and assume background knowledge attained from previous sections. Good Luck!
Before you start....
  • Please read this Introduction
  • It is a long course and will take you quite a while to complete. If you use the Hotlist or Bookmark feature of your browser you will be able to return to the place where you left off at or to return to a particular section.
  • This tutorial should be viewable on any WWW browser - if you have any problems please let us know!.
    The Course Section Topics
  • Overview of C
  • Why use C?
  • Uses of C ...
  • Appendix: C's functions You've now reached the end of this online tutorial. We have covered a lot of ground - but this has been a first course in C and there is still plenty to learn. However, as long as you keep in mind that
  • 4. C Programming
    A collection of resources for game programmers.Category Computers Programming Languages C......c programming.
    http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Vista/7336/robcstf.htm
    C Programming
    Home UK mirror
    Visit my Mappy page - A mapping utility for making levels for YOUR games (extremely good). Includes full source, examples and playback library functions. Now V1.3.18. DirectX playback library and (Win)Allegro playback library available
    Play Platform One the game online - A small java game you can play in your browser.
    Visit my Fatal Mission page - A nostalgic look back to games I wrote on the Amiga.
    Visit my F O U R page - A sort of game work in progress widget, not currently being updated.
    Visit my Alien Epidemic page. Updated 17/8/2000.
    Download 3 Puzzles: Baroll V1.05, Molefest V1.05 and Pyrastak V1.0 (1.8Mb) Windows (DirectX). Baroll has 72 levels of Barrel rolling puzzling. Molefest is a fun PipeMania type game. Pyrastak is... well, mysterious. Updated 28/10/2002 to latest Allegro 4.1.4 to fix problems on WinXP
    Download Baroll V1.05 DOS (1.3Mb) A great puzzle game for PC with many levels (full game).
    Download Molefest V1.05 DOS (526K) A great puzzle game for PC with many levels (full game, with source)
    Download Pyrastak V1.0 DOS

    5. C Programming
    A tutorial that starts with the very basic and ends with the very complex.Category Computers Programming Languages C Tutorials......Next Contents. c programming. Steve Holmes University of StrathclydeComputer Centre Curran Building 100 Cathedral Street Glasgow.
    http://www.strath.ac.uk/IT/Docs/Ccourse/
    Next: Contents
    C Programming
    Steve Holmes
    University of Strathclyde Computer Centre
    Curran Building
    100 Cathedral Street
    Glasgow
    Please note: Steve no longer works for the University of Strathclyde, and we are unable to answer queries relating to this course. You are welcome to make links to it however, but please bear in mind that it was written for students within the University and so some parts may not be relevant to external readers.

    6. C Programming
    help you learn C or C++ and provide you with C and C++ programming resources. The Getting Started with C++ section
    http://www.strath.ac.uk/CC/Courses/NewCcourse/ccourse.html
    Next: Contents
    C Programming
    Steve Holmes
    University of Strathclyde Computer Centre
    Curran Building
    100 Cathedral Street
    Glasgow
    Please note: Steve no longer works for the University of Strathclyde, and we are unable to answer queries relating to this course. You are welcome to make links to it however, but please bear in mind that it was written for students within the University and so some parts may not be relevant to external readers.

    7. Brian W. Kernighan: Programming In C: A Tutorial
    This ``tutorial'' is presented as a historical document, not as a tutorial. Although it has lost Category Computers Programming Languages C Historical...... compilers today do no longer understand the C of 1974, four years before Kernighanand Ritchie published the first edition of ``The c programming Language''.
    http://www.lysator.liu.se/c/bwk-tutor.html
    Programming A Tutorial
    Brian W. Kernighan
    Bell Laboratories, Murray Hill, N. J.
    Although it has lost little of its didactic value, it describes a language that C compilers today do no longer understand: the C of 1974, four years before Kernighan and Ritchie published the first edition of ``The C Programming Language''. Table of Contents:
  • Introduction
  • A Simple C Program
  • A Working C Program; Variables; Types and Type Declarations
  • Constants ...
  • Simple I/O getchar, putchar, printf
  • If relational operators compound statements
  • While Statement ...
  • Initialization of Variables
  • Scope Rules : Who Knows About What
  • #define #include
  • Bit Operators
  • Assignment Operators ...
  • Floating Point
  • Horrors! goto's and labels
  • Acknowledgements
    Introduction
    C lets you write your programs clearly and simply it has decent control flow facilities so your code can be read straight down the page, without labels or GOTO's; it lets you write code that is compact without being too cryptic; it encourages modularity and good program organization; and it provides good data-structuring facilities. This is not Users who would like the full story should consult the "C Reference Manual" by D. M. Ritchie
  • 8. C Programming
    The notes on these pages are for the courses in c programming I used to teach in the Experimental College at the University of Washington in Seattle, WA.
    http://www.adhesivesystems.com/~scs/cclass/cclass.html
    C Programming
    The notes on these pages are for the courses in C Programming I used to teach in the Experimental College at the University of Washington in Seattle, WA. Normally these notes accompany fairly traditional classroom lecture presentations, but they are intended to be reasonably complete (more so, for that matter, than the lectures!) and should be usable as standalone tutorials. '' side by side. If you're just getting your feet wet and would like a somewhat simpler introduction, read the `` Introductory Class Notes .'' If you have had an introduction to C (either here or elsewhere) and are now looking to fill in some of the missing pieces, read the `` Intermediate Class Notes Of course, just reading a book or these notes won't really teach you C; you will also want to write and run your own programs, for practice and so that the language concepts will make some kind of practical sense. Most of my programming assignments (including review questions) are here as well, along with their solution sets. (No peeking at the answers until you've given the problems your best shot!) These notes are arranged for the web in the usual hierarchy by section and subsection. If you want to read through all of them, without keeping track of your own stack to implement a depth-first tree traversal, just follow the ``read sequentially'' links at the bottom of each page.

    9. Comp.lang.c Frequently Asked Questions
    comp.lang.c Frequently Asked Questions This collection of hypertext pages is Copyright 1995 by Steve Summit. Content from the book ``c programming FAQs Frequently Asked Questions'' (AddisonWesley, 1995, ISBN 0-201-84519-9) is
    http://www.adhesivesystems.com/~scs/C-faq/top.html
    comp.lang.c Frequently Asked Questions
    This page is the top of an HTML version of the Usenet comp.lang.c Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) list. An FAQ list is a collection of questions commonly asked on Usenet, together with presumably definitive answers, provided in an attempt to keep repeated questions on the newsgroup down to a low background drone so that discussion can move on to more interesting matters. Since they distill knowledge gleaned from many sources and answer questions which are demonstrably Frequent, FAQ lists serve as useful references outside of their originating Usenet newsgroups. This list is, I dare to claim, no exception, and the HTML version you're looking at now, as well as other versions referenced just below, are intended to be useful to C programmers everywhere. Several other versions of this FAQ list are available, including a book-length version published by Addison-Wesley . (The book, though longer, also has a few more errors; I've prepared an errata list .) See also question Like so many web pages, this is very much a ``work in progress.'' I would, of course, like it if it were perfect, but it's been two years or so since I first started talking about putting this thing on the web, and if I were to wait until all the glitches were worked out, you might never see it. Each page includes a ``mail feedback'' button, so you can help me debug it. (At first, you don't have to worry about reporting minor formatting hiccups; many of these result from lingering imperfections in the programs that generate these pages, or from the fact that I have not exhaustively researched how various browsers implement the HTML tags I'm using, or from the fact that I haven't gone the last yard in trying to rig up HTML that looks good in spite of the fact that HTML doesn't have everything you need to make things look good.)

    10. C Programming
    c programming. The notes Readings Notes to Accompany The c programmingLanguage, by Kernighan and Ritchie (``K R''). Readings Introductory
    http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/cclass/cclass.html
    C Programming
    The notes on these pages are for the courses in C Programming I used to teach in the Experimental College at the University of Washington in Seattle, WA. Normally these notes accompany fairly traditional classroom lecture presentations, but they are intended to be reasonably complete (more so, for that matter, than the lectures!) and should be usable as standalone tutorials. '' side by side. If you're just getting your feet wet and would like a somewhat simpler introduction, read the `` Introductory Class Notes .'' If you have had an introduction to C (either here or elsewhere) and are now looking to fill in some of the missing pieces, read the `` Intermediate Class Notes Of course, just reading a book or these notes won't really teach you C; you will also want to write and run your own programs, for practice and so that the language concepts will make some kind of practical sense. Most of my programming assignments (including review questions) are here as well, along with their solution sets. (No peeking at the answers until you've given the problems your best shot!) These notes are arranged for the web in the usual hierarchy by section and subsection. If you want to read through all of them, without keeping track of your own stack to implement a depth-first tree traversal, just follow the ``read sequentially'' links at the bottom of each page.

    11. Howstuffworks "How C Programming Works"
    The c programming language may be the most widely used language on the planet. Learn how to write computer programs in C! The c programming language is a popular and widely used programming language for creating computer programs.
    http://www.howstuffworks.com/c.htm
    ComputerStuff AutoStuff ElectronicsStuff ScienceStuff ... PeopleStuff
    Categories
    Hardware
    Internet Peripherals Security ... Web Servers
    Sponsored By:
    Explore Stuff
    Big List of Articles
    Browse the Classifieds Get the Newsletter Shop or Compare Prices ... Software
    How C Programming Works
    by Marshall Brain
    What is C?

    The Simplest C Program

    Branching and Looping in C
    ... Shop or Compare Prices The C programming language is a popular and widely used programming language for creating computer programs . Programmers around the world embrace C because it gives maximum control and efficiency to the programmer. If you are a programmer, or if you are interested in becoming a programmer, there are a couple of benefits you gain from learning C:
    • You will be able to read and write code for a large number of platforms everything from microcontrollers to the most advanced scientific systems can be written in C, and many modern operating systems are written in C.
    • The jump to the object oriented C++ language becomes much easier. C++ is an extension of C, and it is nearly impossible to learn C++ without learning C first.
    This animation shows the execution of a simple C program. By the end of this article you will understand how it works!

    12. C Programming Notes
    Covers the basics of input/output, string functions and explanations of basic data types and operators.Category Computers Programming Languages C Tutorials......c programming Notes. Introductory c programming Class Notes, Chapter1 Steve Summit These notes are part of the UW Experimental College
    http://www.eskimo.com/~scs/cclass/notes/top.html
    C Programming Notes
    Introductory C Programming Class Notes, Chapter 1
    Steve Summit
    These notes are part of the UW Experimental College course on Introductory C Programming. They are based on notes prepared (beginning in Spring, 1995) to supplement the book The C Programming Language Chapter 1: Introduction Chapter 2: Basic Data Types and Operators Chapter 3: Statements and Control Flow Chapter 4: More about Declarations (and Initialization) ... Read Sequentially This page by Steve Summit mail feedback

    13. The C Programming Language
    By Brian W. Kernighan and Dennis M. Ritchie, the original (revised) and the best book to learn C.Category Computers Programming Languages C Books......The c programming Language, Second Edition. by Brian W. Kernighan andDennis M. Ritchie. Prentice Hall, Inc., 1988. ISBN 013-110362
    http://cm.bell-labs.com/cm/cs/cbook/
    The C Programming Language, Second Edition
    by Brian W. Kernighan and Dennis M. Ritchie
    Prentice Hall, Inc., 1988.
    ISBN 0-13-110362-8 (paperback), 0-13-110370-9 (hardback).
    • The book is readily available at large bookstores (especially university ones around beginning of term) but tends not to be stocked at the mall because it's treated like a textbook. Ordering it online is easy, for example at Amazon.com Borders Blackwell's , or Fatbrain You can also look it up at the Prentice-Hall home page. Kernighan , a relatively uncommon name, is a good search term to find it quickly at all of these places. If you are curious, a GIF-format graph of its sales rank at Amazon.com for the last couple of years is available.
    • Here is a list of errata in the published version; many of these are corrected in recent printings.
    • The history of the language is traced in ``The Development of the C Language'', from HOPL II, 1993: browsable , or printable PostScript or PDF . This and other historical material, including early manuals and compilers, is available at Dennis Ritchie's home page , while Brian Kernighan's home page collects pointers to his work on C and diverse other languages and systems.

    14. Chistory
    ABSTRACT. The c programming language was devised in the early 1970s as asystem implementation language for the nascent Unix operating system.
    http://cm.bell-labs.com/cm/cs/who/dmr/chist.html
    The Development of the C Language*
    Dennis M. Ritchie
    Bell Labs/Lucent Technologies
    Murray Hill, NJ 07974 USA
    dmr@bell-labs.com
    ABSTRACT
    The C programming language was devised in the early 1970s as a system implementation language for the nascent Unix operating system. Derived from the typeless language BCPL, it evolved a type structure; created on a tiny machine as a tool to improve a meager programming environment, it has become one of the dominant languages of today. This paper studies its evolution.
    Introduction
    NOTE:

    This paper is about the development of the C programming language, the influences on it, and the conditions under which it was created. For the sake of brevity, I omit full descriptions of C itself, its parent B [Johnson 73] and its grandparent BCPL [Richards 79], and instead concentrate on characteristic elements of each language and how they evolved. C came into being in the years 1969-1973, in parallel with the early development of the Unix operating system; the most creative period occurred during 1972. Another spate of changes peaked between 1977 and 1979, when portability of the Unix system was being demonstrated. In the middle of this second period, the first widely available description of the language appeared: The C Programming Language

    15. Howstuffworks "How C Programming Works"
    The c programming language may be the most widely used language on the planet.Learn how to write computer programs in C! How c programming Works.
    http://computer.howstuffworks.com/c.htm
    ComputerStuff AutoStuff ElectronicsStuff ScienceStuff ... PeopleStuff
    Categories
    Hardware
    Internet Peripherals Security ... Web Servers
    Sponsored By:
    Explore Stuff
    Big List of Articles
    Browse the Classifieds Get the Newsletter Shop or Compare Prices ... Software
    How C Programming Works
    by Marshall Brain
    What is C?

    The Simplest C Program

    Branching and Looping in C
    ... Shop or Compare Prices The C programming language is a popular and widely used programming language for creating computer programs . Programmers around the world embrace C because it gives maximum control and efficiency to the programmer. If you are a programmer, or if you are interested in becoming a programmer, there are a couple of benefits you gain from learning C:
    • You will be able to read and write code for a large number of platforms everything from microcontrollers to the most advanced scientific systems can be written in C, and many modern operating systems are written in C.
    • The jump to the object oriented C++ language becomes much easier. C++ is an extension of C, and it is nearly impossible to learn C++ without learning C first.
    This animation shows the execution of a simple C program. By the end of this article you will understand how it works!

    16. Genetic-programming.org-Home-Page
    A definitive source of information about the field of genetic programming with links and conferences.
    http://www.genetic-programming.org/
    Welcome to
    www.genetic-programming.org
    (A source of information about the field of genetic programming)
    Last updated July 15, 2000 This is the home page of the Genetic Programming Conference organization Skip down this page to Information on the field of Genetic Programming Skip down this page to Information on the field of Evolutionary Computation in General Click here for Genetic and Evolutionary Computation Conference (GECCO-2001) in San Francisco - Silicon Valley on July 7 - 11, 2001 (Combination of annual Genetic Programming Conference and ISGA conference). Click here for Euro-GP-2001 Conference on April 18 - 20, 2001 in Milan, Italy. The fourth annual Euro-GP Conference will be held on April 18 - 20, 2001 in Milan, Italy. A number of Evo-Net (The Network of Excellence in Evolutionary Computation) workshops will be held in conjunction with this conference. Click here for Genetic Programming Inc. (www.genetic-programming.com) including information about 1,000-Pentium parallel computer for doing genetic programming research. Click here for International Society for Genetic and Evolutionary Computation (ISGEC)
    Information on the Field of Genetic Programming (GP)
    Genetic programming is an automated method for creating a working computer program from a high-level problem statement of a problem. Genetic programming does this by genetically breeding a population of computer programs using the principles of Darwinian natural selection and biologically inspired operations. Old Chinese saying says "animated gif worth one megaword," so

    17. Introduction To CProgramming
    Discus' arrays,strings,and memory management.An all arround good tutorial to learn the c programming Category Computers Programming Languages C Tutorials......Introduction to c programming by Rob Miles, Electronic EngineeringContents. 1. Computers 2. Programming Languages 3. C 4. A First
    http://www.hull.ac.uk/Hull/CC_Web/docs/cnotes/contents.html
    Introduction to C Programming
    by Rob Miles, Electronic Engineering
    Contents
    1. Computers
    2. Programming Languages

    3. C

    4. A First C Program
    ...
    Glossary of Terms
    Rob Miles, R.S.Miles@e-eng.hull.ac.uk, Electronic Engineering
    HTML by Bronwen Reid , July 1995

    18. Introduction To C Programming: Computer Centre: University Of Leicester
    Computer Centre. Introduction to c programming. Objectives. This section is designedto give you a general overview of the c programming language.
    http://www.le.ac.uk/cc/iss/tutorials/cprog/ccccover.html
    Computer Centre
    Introduction to C Programming
    Objectives
    This section is designed to give you a general overview of the C programming language. Although much of this section will be expanded in later sections it gives you a taste of what is to come.
    Why use C?
    C has been used successfully for every type of programming problem imaginable from operating systems to spreadsheets to expert systems - and efficient compilers are available for machines ranging in power from the Apple Macintosh to the Cray supercomputers. The largest measure of C 's success seems to be based on purely practical considerations:
    • the portability of the compiler;
    • the standard library concept;
    • a powerful and varied repertoire of operators;
    • an elegant syntax;
    • ready access to the hardware when needed;
    • and the ease with which applications can be optimized by hand-coding isolated procedures
    C is often called a "Middle Level" programming language. This is not a reflection on its lack of programming power but more a reflection on its capability to access the system's low level functions. Most high-level languages (e.g. Fortran) provides everything the programmer might want to do already built into the language. A low level language (e.g. assembler ) provides nothing other than access to the machines basic instruction set. A middle level language, such as C, probably doesn't supply all the constructs found in high-languages - but it provides you with all the building blocks that you will need to produce the results you want!

    19. C Programming Contents
    c programming © Copyright Brian Brown, 19841999. All rights reserved. Notes Tests Home Page . Topic Areas Introduction; Declaring
    http://cs.nmu.edu/programming/c/cstart.htm
    C Programming
    All rights reserved

    Notes
    Tests Home Page Topic Areas
    Original Web Location: http://www.cit.ac.nz/smac/cprogram/default.htm
    FAQ Location: http://www.cit.ac.nz/smac/channel/faq.htm

    20. C Programming Contents
    c programming © Copyright Brian Brown, 19841999. All rights reserved.(Mirrored @gd.tuwien.ac.at with kind permission by the author
    http://gd.tuwien.ac.at/languages/c/programming-bbrown/
    C Programming
    (Mirrored @gd.tuwien.ac.at with kind permission by the author)
    Notes
    Tests Home Page Topic Areas CD-ROM , may host the files locally on their own network and print them out for student use or reference.

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