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


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Combine Gyroscope and Accelerometer Data

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How to capture Control+D signal?

I want to capture the Ctrl+D signal in my program and write a signal handler for it. How can I do that? I am working on C and using a Linux system.
Ryan
73
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5 answers

Whole one core dedicated to single process

Is there any way in Linux to assign one CPU core to a particular given process and there should not be any other processes or interrupt handlers to be scheduled on this core? I have read about process affinity in Linux Binding Processes to CPUs…
akp
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Floating point exception ( SIGFPE ) on 'int main(){ return(0); }'

I am trying to build a simple C program for two different Linux environments. On one device the program runs fine, on the other device the program generates a floating point exception. The program does nothing but return 0 from main which leads me…
Chimera
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Looking for a good hash table implementation in C

I am primarily interested in string keys. Can someone point me towards a library?
Setjmp
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4 answers

Is function call an effective memory barrier for modern platforms?

In a codebase I reviewed, I found the following idiom. void notify(struct actor_t act) { write(act.pipe, "M", 1); } // thread A sending data to thread B void send(byte *data) { global.data = data; notify(threadB); } // in thread B event…
mikebloch
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5 answers

CMAKE - How to properly copy static library's header file into /usr/include?

I'm getting into CMAKE usage with C and actually I'm creating two very small static libraries. My goal is: The libraries are compiled and linked into *.a files. [THIS WORKS] Then I wish to copy that *.a files into /usr/local/lib [THIS ALSO…
Miroslav Mares
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10 answers

Which ordering of nested loops for iterating over a 2D array is more efficient

Which of the following orderings of nested loops to iterate over a 2D array is more efficient in terms of time (cache performance)? Why? int a[100][100]; for(i=0; i<100; i++) { for(j=0; j<100; j++) { a[i][j] = 10; …
Sachin Mhetre
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What are the common undefined/unspecified behavior for C that you run into?

An example of unspecified behavior in the C language is the order of evaluation of arguments to a function. It might be left to right or right to left, you just don't know. This would affect how foo(c++, c) or foo(++c, c) gets evaluated. What other…
Benoit
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Invoking GCC as "cc" versus "gcc"

I am aware that on most GNU/Linux systems, GCC can be invoked by the name "cc" from the command line (as opposed to "gcc"). Is there any difference in GCC's behavior when it is invoked one way versus the other? For example, I know that invoking GCC…
Dan Moulding
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9 answers

Length of array in function argument

This is well known code to compute array length in C: sizeof(array)/sizeof(type) But I can't seem to find out the length of the array passed as an argument to a function: #include int length(const char* array[]) { return…
Jan Turoň
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Why are LIB files beasts of such a duplicitous nature?

I'm trying to understand this LIB file business on Microsoft Windows, and I've just made a discovery that will - I hope - dispel the confusion that hitherto has prevented me from getting a clear grasp of the issue. To wit, LIB files are not the one…
Lumi
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redirect stdout/stderr to a string

there has been many previous questions about redirecting stdout/stderr to a file. is there a way to redirect stdout/stderr to a string?
Prasanth Madhavan
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clock_gettime alternative in Mac OS X

When compiling a program I wrote on Mac OS X after installing the necessary libraries through MacPorts, I get this error: In function 'nanotime': error: 'CLOCK_REALTIME' undeclared (first use in this function) error: (Each undeclared identifier is…
Delan Azabani
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Meaning of U suffix

What does the postfix (or suffix) U mean for the following values? 0U 100U
lovespring
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