Chapter 1. Overview of C: Whyusec?
Chapter 1. Overview of C: Whyusec?
Chapter 1. Overview of C: Whyusec?
Chapter 1. Overview of C
Overview
Dennis M. Ritchie to develop the UNIX operating system at Bell Labs. C was
In 1978, Brian Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie produced the first publicly available
The UNIX operating system, the C compiler, and essentially all UNIX application
programs have been written in C. C has now become a widely used professional
Easy to learn
Structured language
Why use C ?
C was initially used for system development work, particularly the programs that make-up the operating
system. C was adopted as a system development
language because it produces code that runs nearly as fast as the code written in assembly language.
Some examples of the use of C might be:
Operating System
Language Compilers
Assemblers
Text Editors
Print Spoolers
Network Drivers
Modern Programs
Databases
Language Interpreters
Utilities
C Programs
A C program can vary from 3 lines to millions of lines and it should be written into one or more text files
with extension ".c"; for example, hello.c. You can use "vi", "vim" or any other text editor to write your C
program into a file.
The C Compiler
The source code written in source file is the human readable source for your program. It needs to be
"compiled" into machine language so that your CPU can actually execute the program as per the
instructions given. The compiler compiles the source codes into final executable programs. The most
frequently used and free available compiler is the GNU C/C++ compiler.
Tokens in C
A C program consists of various tokens and a token is either a keyword, an identifier, a constant, a string
literal, or a symbol. For example, the following C statement consists of five tokens:
printf
(
"Hello, World! \n"
)
Semicolons
In a C program, the semicolon is a statement terminator. That is, each individual statement must be
ended with a semicolon. It indicates the end of one logical entity. Given below are two different
statements:
return(0);
Comments
Comments are like helping text in your C program and they are ignored by the compiler. They start with
/* and terminate with the characters */ as shown below:
Identifiers
item. An identifier starts with a letter A to Z, a to z, or an underscore ‘_’ followed by zero or more
letters, underscores, and digits (0 to 9). C does not allow punctuation characters such as @, $, and %
within identifiers. C is a case-sensitive programming language. Thus, Manpower and manpower are two
different identifiers in C. Here are some examples of acceptable identifiers:
Keywords
The following list shows the reserved words in C. These reserved words may not be used as constants or
variables or any other identifier names.
do do struct Packed
double
Chapter 2. Data Types
Data types in C refer to an extensive system used for declaring variables or functions of different types.
The type of a variable determines how much space it occupies in storage and how the bit pattern stored
is interpreted.
They are arithmetic types and are further classified into: (a) integer types and (b) floating-point types.
2. Enumerated types:
They are again arithmetic types and they are used to define variables that can only assign certain
discrete integer values throughout the program.
4. Derived types:
They include (a) Pointer types, (b) Array types, (c) Structure types, (d) Union types, and (e) Function
types.
Integer Types
The following table provides the details of standard integer types with their
To get the exact size of a type or a variable on a particular platform, you can use the sizeof operator. The
expressions sizeof(type) yields the storage size of the object or type in bytes. Given below is an example
to get the size of int type on any machine:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <limits.h>
int main()
return 0;
Floating-Point Types
The following table provides the details of standard floating-point types with storage sizes and value
ranges and their precision:
The header file float.h defines macros that allow you to use these values and other details about the
binary representation of real numbers in your programs. The following example prints the storage space
taken by a float type and its range values:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <float.h>
int main()
{
return 0;
When you compile and execute the above program, it produces the following result on Linux:
Storage size for float : 4
Precision value: 6
3. Pointers to void
A pointer of type void * represents the address of an object, but not its type. For
example, a memory allocation function void *malloc(size_t size); returns a pointer
to void which can be casted to any data type.
Chapter 3.Variables
A variable is nothing but a name given to a storage area that our programs can manipulate. Each
variable in C has a specific type, which determines the size and layout of the variable's memory; the
range of values that can be stored within that memory; and the set of operations that can be applied to
the variable.
The name of a variable can be composed of letters, digits, and the underscore character. It must begin
with either a letter or an underscore. Upper and lowercase letters are distinct because C is case-
sensitive. Based on the basic types explained in the previous chapter, there will be the following basic
variable types:
Type Description
C programming language also allows to define various other types of variables, which we will cover in
subsequent chapters like Enumeration, Pointer, Array, Structure, Union, etc. For this chapter, let us study
only basic variable types.
Variable Definition in C
A variable definition tells the compiler where and how much storage to create for the variable. A
variable definition specifies a data type and contains a list of one or more variables of that type as
follows:
type variable_list;
Here, type must be a valid C data type including char, w_char, int, float, double, bool, or any user-
defined object; and variable_list may consist of one or more identifier names separated by commas.
Some valid declarations are shown here:
int i, j, k;
char c, ch;
float f, salary;
double d;
The line int i, j, k; declares and defines the variables i, j and k; which instruct the compiler to create
variables named i, j, and k of type int. Variables can be initialized (assigned an initial value) in their
declaration. The initializer consists of an equal sign followed by a constant expression as follows:
For definition without an initializer: variables with static storage duration are implicitly initialized with
NULL (all bytes have the value 0); the initial value of all other variables are undefined.
Variable Declaration in C
A variable declaration provides assurance to the compiler that there exists a variable with the given type
and name so that the compiler can proceed for further compilation without requiring the complete
detail about the variable. A variable declaration has its meaning at the time of compilation only, the
compiler needs actual variable declaration at the time of linking the program. A variable declaration is
useful when you are using multiple files and you define your variable in one of the files which will be
available at the time of linking the program. You will use the keyword extern to declare a variable at any
place.
Though you can declare a variable multiple times in your C program, it can be defined only once in a file,
a function, or a block of code.
Example
Try the following example, where variables have been declared at the top, but they
have been defined and initialized inside the main function:
#include <stdio.h>
// Variable declaration:
extern int a, b;
extern int c;
extern float f;
int main ()
/* variable definition: */
int a, b;
int c;
float f;
/* actual initialization */
a = 10;
b = 20;
c = a + b;
return 0;
}