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

Building a multi-file program

In all of our single-file programs, we used the following command line to build them:

cc <sourcefile>.c -o <sourcefile> -Wall -Werror -std=c17

In the two-file program from Chapter 23Using File Input and File Output, we used the following command line to build it:

cc <sourcefile_1>.c <sourcefile_2>.c -o <programname> <additional options>

The compiler command line can take multiple source files and compile them into a single executable. In this program, we have four source files, so to compile this program, we need to put each source file on the command line, as follows:

cc card.c hand.c deck.c dealer.c -o dealer <additional options>

The order of the list of source files does not matter. The compiler will use the results of the compilation of each file and build them into a single executable named dealer.

Compile the program with the preceding command. The program should...