
1.1. C Is a Middle-Level language
1.2. C Is a Structured Language
1.3. C Is A Programmer's Language
You can download this lesson for your reference.
You will see the logical steps behind creating an executable form of your C program.
For all the programming examples in this course we use a fantastic, free development environment called Code::Blocks.
For your convenience, we have distributed the Windows version here - and you can download and install it. For Linux and Mac versions - the look and feel is the same - and download links are provided in the lesson.
ASCII (i/ˈæski/ ASS-kee), abbreviated from American Standard Code for Information Interchange, also known as US-ASCII,[2] is a character-encoding scheme.
Originally based on the English alphabet, it encodes 128 specified characters into 7-bit binary integers. It defines 95 printable characters, including the space (which is considered an invisible graphic), and 33 non-printing control characters - many of which are now obsolete.
Work on the ASCII standard began on October 6, 1960, with the first meeting of the American Standards Association's (ASA) X3.2 subcommittee. It was developed from telegraphic codes and its first commercial use was as a 7-bit teleprinter code promoted by Bell data services. The first edition of the standard was published during 1963, a major revision during 1967, and the most recent update during 1986. Compared to earlier telegraph codes, the proposed Bell code and ASCII were both ordered for more convenient sorting (i.e., alphabetization) of lists, and added features for devices other than teleprinters.
In C library and Unix conventions, the null character is used to terminate text strings; such null-terminated strings can be known in abbreviation as ASCIZ or ASCIIZ, where here Z stands for "zero".
This course is the FIRST, ONLY, and most comprehensive C PROGRAMMING BEGINNER'S course that brings the THREE ASPECTS TOGETHER - 1) On screen step-by-step explanation 2) Building programs in IDE and 3) hands-on exercises stepped through debugger. NO OTHER book, tutorial or course offers these unique set, anywhere on the internet.
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COURSE UPDATE 01-NOV-2017:
Why you should learn C Programming language?
What you will get from our C programming course:
Pre-requisites:
No specific requirements! We teach from the very early basics - you do not need to know any previous programming language. THIS is very your journey to programming knowledge begins :-) We even include a complete coding environment for Windows, that you can freely download and use from our course.
Who is this course for?
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Important information before you enroll:
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