Questions tagged [c]

C is a general-purpose programming language used for system programming (OS and embedded), libraries, games and cross-platform. This tag should be used with general questions concerning the C language, as defined in the ISO 9899 standard (the latest version, 9899:2018, unless otherwise specified — also tag version-specific requests with c89, c99, c11, etc). C is distinct from C++ and it should not be combined with the C++ tag without a specific reason.

C (pronounced "See", like the letter C) is a general-purpose computer programming language developed between 1969 and 1973 by Dennis Ritchie at the Bell Telephone Laboratories for use with the UNIX operating system. Its design provides constructs that map efficiently to typical machine instructions, and therefore it found lasting use in applications that had formerly been coded in assembly language. It is a highly efficient procedural programming language and has an emphasis on functions whereas modern object-oriented programming languages tend to emphasize data.

The C programming language was based on the earlier programming languages B, BCPL, and CPL.

The C language and its optional library are standardized as ISO/IEC 9899, the current version being ISO/IEC 9899:2018 (C17). A draft version N2176 is available for free.

Although C was designed for implementing system software, it is also widely used for developing portable application software.

C is one of the most widely used programming languages of all time and there are very few computer architectures for which a C compiler does not exist. C has greatly influenced many other popular programming languages, most notably C++, which began as an extension to C. Other languages that have been greatly influenced by C are C#, Objective-C and Java.


Design

C is an imperative (procedural) systems implementation language. It was designed to be compiled using a relatively straightforward compiler, to provide low-level access to memory, to provide language constructs that map efficiently to machine instructions, and to require minimal run-time support. C was, therefore, useful for many applications that had formerly been coded in assembly language.

Despite its low-level capabilities, the language was designed to encourage cross-platform programming. A standards-compliant and portably written C program can be compiled for a very wide variety of computer platforms and operating systems with very few changes to its source code. The language has become available on a very wide range of platforms, from embedded microcontrollers to supercomputers.


Tag usage

When posting questions about C programming, please make sure to include:

  • Target system and compiler information. This includes the compiler name, version and settings used to compile.
  • In case your question is about compiler errors/warnings, please quote those errors/warnings in the question. Also clarify which line the compiler error refers to.
  • If your question is specific to one particular version of the the language, add or . Pre-standard, historical questions should be tagged .
  • Unless the question explicitly mentions which version of the C standard that is used, it is assumed that the current version is used. That is, whichever version of ISO 9899 that ISO currently lists as active. Please have this in mind when answering or commenting on questions tagged .

Using and together

C and C++ are two distinct and often incompatible languages. Avoid using both tags in the same question unless you have good reasons.

A question should be tagged with only, if:

  • It contains pure C, with no trace of C++, or questions with code that could be either language.
  • The code is compiled with a C compiler.

A question should be tagged with only, if:

  • It contains code with any C++ features. Even though the code may be "C style".
  • The code is compiled with a C++ compiler.

A question should be tagged with both and if it is about:

  • Specific differences between C and C++.
  • Compatibility or porting code between C and C++.
  • C++ code that uses C libraries (for example code using extern "C").

Editing and moderation guidelines for posts with both and tags:

To edit/re-tag/moderate questions with both tags, it is recommended that you have full edit privileges and either a gold or a gold badge.

If you encounter a post with both tags, edit/re-tag it if needed according to the above rules. If you can tell the language by reading the posted code, simply edit tags accordingly. Avoid prompting the user "is it C or C++?" in comments unless the question is truly unclear.

One example of an unclear question is when the user explicitly claims that they are programming in C, but posts code or compiler messages for C++. If so, prompt for clarification and close-vote as unclear.

"Either C or C++ is fine" opinions from the OP is a strong indication of a poor or unclear question. Answers may be very different depending on language picked. Prompt for clarification, close as unclear/too broad until the OP has clarified this.

Be careful about re-tagging questions once there are answers posted, particularly if there are already both C and C++ answers posted. In such cases, the tags should be left alone, since changing them would make posted answers invalid.

Answers with C++ code to a C question that has never been tagged should be deleted as off-topic. Please check the question edit history before flagging/deleting such answers, to verify that the question never had the C++ tag.


Books about C

There are many, many books of varying quality about how to use C. See the question Definitive C Book Guide and List.

Note that this question is controversial; it would not be accepted on modern Stack Overflow, but it is a useful historical artifact that is still being maintained.


Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Types and qualifiers

Declaration and initialization

Scope and storage duration

Integer arithmetic

Floating-point arithmetic

Operators, precedence and order of evaluation

Loops

Arrays

Pointers and null

Function pointers

Strings

Dynamic memory allocation

Structs and unions

The preprocessor and macros

Standard compliance

Undefined, unspecified and implementation-defined behavior

The standard library

Best practices and style concerns


External resources


Hello World program in C

#include <stdio.h>

int main(void)
{
    printf("hello, world\n");
    return 0;
}

Chat Room

Chat about C with other Stack Overflow users


Online compilers


399079 questions
354
votes
11 answers

Fast ceiling of an integer division in C / C++

Given integer values x and y, C and C++ both return as the quotient q = x/y the floor of the floating point equivalent. I'm interested in a method of returning the ceiling instead. For example, ceil(10/5)=2 and ceil(11/5)=3. The obvious approach…
andand
  • 17,134
  • 11
  • 53
  • 79
350
votes
18 answers

Why use double indirection? or Why use pointers to pointers?

When should a double indirection be used in C? Can anyone explain with a example? What I know is that a double indirection is a pointer to a pointer. Why would I need a pointer to a pointer?
manju
  • 3,511
  • 3
  • 15
  • 4
349
votes
21 answers

Why should I always enable compiler warnings?

I often hear that when compiling C and C++ programs I should "always enable compiler warnings". Why is this necessary? How do I do that? Sometimes I also hear that I should "treat warnings as errors". Should I? How do I do that?
n. m. could be an AI
  • 112,515
  • 14
  • 128
  • 243
347
votes
6 answers

When should I use mmap for file access?

POSIX environments provide at least two ways of accessing files. There's the standard system calls open(), read(), write(), and friends, but there's also the option of using mmap() to map the file into virtual memory. When is it preferable to use…
Peter Burns
  • 44,401
  • 7
  • 38
  • 56
345
votes
15 answers

Removing trailing newline character from fgets() input

I am trying to get some data from the user and send it to another function in gcc. The code is something like this. printf("Enter your Name: "); if (!(fgets(Name, sizeof Name, stdin) != NULL)) { fprintf(stderr, "Error reading Name.\n"); …
sfactor
  • 12,592
  • 32
  • 102
  • 152
344
votes
4 answers

Size of character ('a') in C/C++

What is the size of character in C and C++ ? As far as I know the size of char is 1 byte in both C and C++. In C: #include int main() { printf("Size of char : %d\n", sizeof(char)); return 0; } In C++: #include int…
whacko__Cracko
  • 6,592
  • 8
  • 33
  • 35
342
votes
3 answers

How to detect reliably Mac OS X, iOS, Linux, Windows in C preprocessor?

If there's some cross-platform C/C++ code that should be compiled on Mac OS X, iOS, Linux, Windows, how can I detect them reliably during preprocessor process?
eonil
  • 83,476
  • 81
  • 317
  • 516
342
votes
17 answers

What is a bus error? Is it different from a segmentation fault?

What does the "bus error" message mean, and how does it differ from a segmentation fault?
raldi
  • 21,344
  • 33
  • 76
  • 86
341
votes
10 answers

What does a type followed by _t (underscore-t) represent?

This seems like a simple question, but I can't find it with the Stack Overflow search or Google. What does a type followed by a _t mean? Such as int_t anInt; I see it a lot in C code meant to deal closely with hardware—I can't help but think that…
Kevin Griffin
  • 14,084
  • 7
  • 28
  • 23
340
votes
24 answers

What's the purpose of using braces (i.e. {}) for a single-line if or loop?

I'm reading some lecture notes of my C++ lecturer and he wrote the following: Use Indentation // OK Never rely on operator precedence - Always use parentheses // OK Always use a { } block - even for a single line // not OK, why ??? Const object…
JAN
  • 21,236
  • 66
  • 181
  • 318
340
votes
15 answers

How do I create an array of strings in C?

I am trying to create an array of strings in C. If I use this code: char (*a[2])[14]; a[0]="blah"; a[1]="hmm"; gcc gives me "warning: assignment from incompatible pointer type". What is the correct way to do this? edit: I am curious why this…
Charles
339
votes
22 answers

Is uninitialized local variable the fastest random number generator?

I know the uninitialized local variable is undefined behaviour(UB), and also the value may have trap representations which may affect further operation, but sometimes I want to use the random number only for visual representation and will not…
ggrr
  • 7,737
  • 5
  • 31
  • 53
337
votes
19 answers

Why do I get a segmentation fault when writing to a "char *s" initialized with a string literal, but not "char s[]"?

The following code receives seg fault on line 2: char *str = "string"; str[0] = 'z'; // could be also written as *str = 'z' printf("%s\n", str); While this works perfectly well: char str[] = "string"; str[0] = 'z'; printf("%s\n", str); Tested…
Markus
  • 3,491
  • 3
  • 18
  • 6
335
votes
13 answers

How to escape the % (percent) sign in C's printf

How do you escape the % sign when using printf in C? printf("hello\%"); /* not like this */
Chris_45
  • 8,769
  • 16
  • 62
  • 73
335
votes
11 answers

max value of integer

In C, the integer (for 32 bit machine) is 32 bits, and it ranges from -32,768 to +32,767. In Java, the integer(long) is also 32 bits, but ranges from -2,147,483,648 to +2,147,483,647. I do not understand how the range is different in Java, even…
stackuser
  • 4,081
  • 4
  • 21
  • 27