Friday, January 16, 2009

Introduction

TheC programming language was originally developed by Dennis Ritchie of Bell Laboratories,
and was designed to run on a PDP-11 with a UNIX operating system. Although it was originally
intended to run under UNIX, there was a great interest in running it on the IBM PC and compatibles, and other systems. C is excellent for actually writing system level programs, and the entire Applix 1616/OS operating system is written in C (except for a few assembler routines). It is an excellent language for this environment because of the simplicity of expression, the compactness of the code, and the wide range of applicability.

It is not a good "beginning" language because it is somewhat cryptic in nature. It allows the programmer a wide range of operations from high level down to a very low level approaching the level of assembly language. There seems to be no limit to the flexibility available. One experienced C programmer made the statement, "You can program anything in C", and the statement is well supported by my own experience with the language. Along with the resulting freedom however, you take on a great deal of responsibility. It is very easy to write a program that destroys itself due to the silly little errors that, say, a Pascal compiler will flag and call a fatal error. In C, you are very much on your own, as you will soon find.

Since C is not a beginners language, I will assume you are not a beginning programmer, and I
will not attempt to bore you by defining a constant and a variable. You will be expected to
know these basic concepts. You will, however, not be expected to know anything of the C
programming language. I will begin with the highest level of C programming, including the
usually intimidating concepts of pointers, structures, and dynamic allocation. To fully understand
these concepts, it will take a good bit of time and work on your part, because they not
particularly easy to grasp, but they are very powerful tools. Enough said about that, you will
see their power when we get there, just don’t allow yourself to worry about them yet.


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