Book Image

Learn C Programming. - Second Edition

By : Jeff Szuhay
Book Image

Learn C Programming. - Second Edition

By: Jeff Szuhay

Overview of this book

The foundation for many modern programming languages such as C++, C#, JavaScript, and Go, C is widely used as a system programming language as well as for embedded systems and high-performance computing. With this book, you'll be able to get up to speed with C in no time. The book takes you through basic programming concepts and shows you how to implement them in the C programming language. Throughout the book, you’ll create and run programs that demonstrate essential C concepts, such as program structure with functions, control structures such as loops and conditional statements, and complex data structures. As you make progress, you’ll get to grips with in-code documentation, testing, and validation methods. This new edition expands upon the use of enumerations, arrays, and additional C features, and provides two working programs based on the code used in the book. What's more, this book uses the method of intentional failure, where you'll develop a working program and then purposely break it to see what happens, thereby learning how to recognize possible mistakes when they happen. By the end of this C programming book, you’ll have developed basic programming skills in C that can be easily applied to other programming languages and have gained a solid foundation for you to build on as a programmer.
Table of Contents (37 chapters)
1
Part 1: C Fundamentals
10
Part 2: Complex Data Types
19
Part 3: Memory Manipulation
22
Part 4: Input and Output
28
Part 5: Building Blocks for Larger Programs

Summary

In this chapter, we fairly exhaustively explored output formatting for integers—both signed and unsigned—floating-point numbers, characters, and strings. Example programs that demonstrate the most common and useful combinations of print modifiers were also presented. However, not all the possible combinations or modifiers were demonstrated. These programs can and should be used as starting points for further experimentation for your specific output formatting needs. These programs are also valuable to verify how a particular C runtime performs because there are always minor differences from one implementation of C to the next. This is one place where differences appear most often.

In the next two chapters, we will explore getting simple input from the command line and then getting formatted and unformatted input from the console. We will then expand those topics in subsequent chapters even further for files, including reading various inputs from...