संवाद लेखन आप अपने और महात्मा गांधीजी के बीच ‘आज के भारत’ पर संवाद लेखन लिखिए - 6 dialogues for each character( 6 for you and 6 for mahatma Gandhi)
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Answer:
This is a C Programming Tutorial for people who have a little experience with an interpreted programming language, such as Emacs Lisp or a GNU shell.
Edition 4.02
Copyright © 1987,1999 Mark Burgess
Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies.
Preface:
Introduction:
Reserved words & example:
Operating systems:
Libraries:
Programming style:
Form of a C program:
Comments:
Functions:
Variables:
Parameters:
Scope:
Preprocessor:
Pointers:
Standard Output and Standard Input:
Assignments Expressions and Operators:
Decisions:
Loops:
Arrays:
Strings:
Putting together a program:
Special Library Functions and Macros:
Hidden Operators:
More on Data Types:
Machine Level Operations:
Files and Devices:
Structures and Unions:
Data structures:
Recursion:
Example Programs chapter:
Errors and debugging:
Summary:
reserved words list:
Comparisons :
Character Conversion Table:
Emacs style file:
Answers to questions:
Index:
Node:Preface, Next:Introduction, Previous:Top, Up:Top
Preface
Every program is limited by the language which is used to write it. C is a programmer's language. Unlike BASIC or Pascal, C was not written as a teaching aid, but as an implementation language. C is a computer language and a programming tool which has grown popular because programmers like it! It is a tricky language but a masterful one. Sceptics have said that it is a language in which everything which can go wrong does go wrong. True, it does not do much hand holding, but also it does not hold anything back. If you have come to C in the hope of finding a powerful language for writing everyday computer programs, then you will not be disappointed. C is ideally suited to modern computers and modern programming.
This book is a tutorial. Its aim is to teach C to a beginner, but with enough of the details so as not be outgrown as the years go by. It presumes that you have some previous aquaintance with programming -- you need to know what a variable is and what a function is -- but you do not need much experience. It is not essential to follow the order of the chapters rigorously, but if you are a beginner to C it is recommended. When it comes down to it, most languages have basically the same kinds of features: variables, ways of making loops, ways of making decisions, ways of accessing files etc. If you want to plan your assault on C, think about what you already know about programming and what you expect to look for in C. You will most likely find all of those things and more, as you work though the chapters.
The examples programs range from quick one-function programs, which do no more than illustrate the sole use of one simple feature, to complete application examples occupying several pages. In places these examples make use of features before they have properly been explained. These programs serve as a taster of what is to come.