Hello every one. Today i'll give you some link to learn html. I think you will love it. Here it's below:
Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Sunday, December 25, 2011
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
What is need to compile in "C"
To wrirte a C program you must have a C compiler . I can give you some link to download C compiler. down there.......
Monday, December 19, 2011
What You Can Do Now
Hour 24
- What You Can Do Now
It's not what you know, but what you
can.
—A. Alekhine
Congratulations! You're now in the
last chapter of this book. You just need to spend one more hour to complete
your 24-hour journey. In this lesson you'll learn more about the C language
from the following topics:
The C Preprocessor
Hour 23
- The C Preprocessor
Intelligence is the faculty of
making artificial objects, especially tools to make tools.
—H. Bergson
In Hour 2, "Writing Your First
C Program," you learned how to use the #include preprocessor directive to
include C header files. Since then, the #include directive has been used in
every program in this book. In this lesson you'll learn more about the C
preprocessor and making macro definitions with the preprocessor directives. The
following topics are discussed in this hour:
Disk File Input and Output: Part II
Hour 22
- Disk File Input and Output: Part II
Disk space: the final frontier.
—Captain Kirk's younger brother
In last hour's lesson you learned
the basics of reading and writing disk data files. In this lesson you'll learn
more about communication with disk data files. The main topics discussed in
this hour are
Disk File Input and Output: Part I
Hour 21
- Disk File Input and Output: Part I
I can only assume that a "Do
Not File" document is filed in a "Do Not File" file.
—F. Church
In Hour 5, "Reading from and
Writing to Standard I/O," you learned how to read or write characters
through standard input or output. In this lesson you'll learn to read data from
or write data to disk files. The following topics are discussed in this lesson:
Another Way to Collect Dissimilar Data
Coming together is a beginning;
keeping together is progress;
working together is success.
keeping together is progress;
working together is success.
—T. Roosevelt
In the previous hour's lesson you
learned how to store data of different types into structures. In this hour
you'll learn another way to collect differently typed data items by using
unions. You'll learn about the following topics in this lesson:
Collecting Data Items of Different Types
The art of programming is the art of
organizing complexity.
—W. W. Dijkstra
In Hour 12, "Storing Similar
Data Items," you learned how to store data of the same type into arrays.
In this hour, you'll learn to use structures to collect data items that have
different data types. The following topics are covered in this lesson:
More Data Types and Functions
That's all there is, there isn't any
more.
—E. Barrymore
In Hour 4, "Data Types and
Names in C," you learned about most of the data types, such as char, int,
float, and double. In Hour 15, "Functions in C," you learned the
basics of using functions in C. In this hour, you'll learn more about data
types and functions from the following topics:
Allocating Memory
It's just as unpleasant to get more
than you bargain for as to get less.
—G. B. Shaw
So far you've learned how to declare
and reserve a piece of memory space before it is used in your program. For
instance, you have to specify the size of an array in your program (or the
compiler has to figure out the size if you declare an unsized array) before you
assign any data to it at runtime. In this lesson you'll learn to allocate
memory space dynamically when your program is running. The four dynamic memory
allocation functions covered in this lesson are
Applying Pointers
Think twice and do once.
—Chinese proverb
In Hour 11, "An Introduction to
Pointers," you learned the basics of using pointers in C. Because pointers
are very useful in programming, it's worth spending another hour to learn more
about them. In this lesson, the following topics are discussed:
Functions in C
Form follows function.
—L. H. Sullivan
In Hour 14, "Scope and Storage
Classes in C," you might have noticed that a function definition is always
given first, before the function is called from a main() function. In fact, you
can put a function definition anywhere you want, as long as you keep the
function declaration at the first place before the function is called. You'll
learn about many function features from the following topics covered in this
lesson:
Sunday, December 18, 2011
Scope and Storage Classes in C
Nobody owns anything and all anyone
has is the use of his presumed possessions.
—P. Wylie
In the previous hours, you've
learned how to declare variables of different data types, as well as to
initialize and use those variables. It's been assumed that you can access
variables from anywhere. Now, the question is: Can we declare variables that
are accessible only to certain portions of a program? In this lesson you'll
learn about the scope and storage classes of data in C. The main topics covered
in this lesson are
Manipulating Strings
I have made this letter longer than
usual, because I lack the time to make it short.
—B. Pascal
In the last hour's lesson you
learned how to use arrays to collect variables of the same type. You also
learned that a character string is actually a character array ended with a null
character \0. In this lesson you'll learn more about strings and C functions
that can be used to manipulate strings. The following topics are covered:
Storing Similar Data Items
Gather up the fragments that remain,
that nothing be lost.
—John 6:12
In last hour's lesson you learned
about pointers and the concept of indirection. In this lesson you'll learn
about arrays, which are collections of similar data items and are closely related
to pointers. The main topics covered in this lesson are
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