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C(7)			Miscellaneous Information Manual		  C(7)

NAME
       c, c78, c89, c90, c95, c99, c11,	c17, c2x -- The	C programming language

DESCRIPTION
       C is a general purpose programming language, which has a	strong connec-
       tion with the UNIX operating system and its derivatives,	since the vast
       majority	 of  those systems were	written	in the C language.  The	C lan-
       guage contains some basic ideas from the	BCPL language  through	the  B
       language	 written  by  Ken Thompson in 1970 for the DEC PDP-7 machines.
       The development of the UNIX operating system was	started	on a PDP-7 ma-
       chine in	assembly language, but it made very difficult to port the  ex-
       isting code to other systems.

       In  1972	 Dennis	 M.  Ritchie worked out	the C programming language for
       further development of the UNIX operating system.  The idea was to  im-
       plement only the	C compiler for different platforms, and	implement most
       part  of	 the  operating	system in the new programming language to sim-
       plify the portability between different architectures.  It follows that
       C is very eligible for (but not limited to) writing  operating  systems
       and low-level applications.

       The C language did not have a specification or standardized version for
       a  long	time.	It  went through a lot of changes and improvements for
       ages.  In 1978, Brian W.	Kernighan and Dennis M.	Ritchie	published  the
       first  book  about  C under the title "The C Programming	Language".  We
       can think of this book as the  first  specification  of	the  language.
       This version is often referred as K&R C after the names of the authors.
       Sometimes  it is	referred as C78, as well, after	the publishing year of
       the first edition of the	book.

       It is important to notice, that the instruction set of the language  is
       limited	to  the	most fundamental elements for simplicity.  Handling of
       the standard I/O	and such common	functions are implemented in  the  li-
       braries	shipped	with the compiler.  As these functions are also	widely
       used, it	was demanded to	include	into the description  what  requisites
       the  library  should conform to,	not just strictly the language itself.
       Accordingly, the	aforementioned standards cover the  library  elements,
       as well.	 The elements of this standard library is still	not enough for
       more  complicated tasks.	 In this case the provided system calls	of the
       given operating system can be used.  To not lose	the portability	by us-
       ing these system	calls, the POSIX (Portable Operating System Interface)
       standard	evolved.  It describes what functions should be	 available  to
       keep portability.  Note,	that POSIX is not a C standard,	but an operat-
       ing  system  standard and thus is beyond	the scope of this manual.  The
       standards discussed below are all C standards and only cover the	C pro-
       gramming	language and the accompanying library.	 All  listed  improve-
       ments  for  each	 standard edition are taken from the official standard
       drafts.	For further details, check the publicly	 available  drafts  or
       purchase	the published standards	-- from	either ISO or IEC resources.

       After  the  publication	of the book mentioned before, the American Na-
       tional Standards	Institute (ANSI) started to work on standardizing  the
       language,  and  they announced ANSI X3.159-1989 in 1989.	 It is usually
       referred	to as ANSI C or	C89.  The main	difference  in	this  standard
       were  the  function  prototypes,	 which is a new	way of declaring func-
       tions.  With the	old-style function declarations, the compiler was  un-
       able  to	 check the sanity of the actual	parameters at a	function call.
       The old syntax was highly error-prone because  incompatible  parameters
       were  hard to detect in the program code	and the	problem	only showed up
       at run-time.

       In 1990,	 the  International  Organization  for	Standardization	 (ISO)
       adopted	the  ANSI standard as ISO/IEC 9899:1990	in 1990.  This is also
       referred	to as ISO C or C90.  It	only contains negligible minor modifi-
       cations against ANSI C, so the two standards  often  considered	to  be
       fully  equivalent.   This was a very important milestone	in the history
       of the C	language, but the development of the language did not stop.

       The ISO C standard was later extended  with  an	amendment  as  ISO/IEC
       9899/AMD1  in  1995.   This  contained, for example, the	wide-character
       support in <wchar.h> and	<wctype.h>, and	also restricted	character  set
       support	via  diagraphs	and <iso646.h>.	 This amendment	is usually re-
       ferred to as C95.  Two technical	corrigenda were	also published:	 Tech-
       nical  Corrigendum  1 as	ISO/IEC	9899/COR1 in 1994 and Technical	Corri-
       gendum 2	as ISO/IEC 9899/COR2 in	1996.  The continuous development  and
       growth made it necessary	to work	out a new standard, which contains the
       new  features  and fixes	the known defects and deficiencies of the lan-
       guage.  As a result, ISO/IEC 9899:1999 was born in 1999 as  the	second
       edition of the standard.	 Similarly to the other	standards, this	is in-
       formally	named after the	publication year as C99.  The improvements in-
       clude (but are not limited to) the following:

	     	 digraphs, trigraphs, and alternative spellings	for the	opera-
		 tors that use non-ISO646 characters in	<iso646.h>

	     	 extended  multibyte  and  wide	 character  library support in
		 <wchar.h> and <wctype.h>

	     	 variable length arrays

	     	 flexible array	members

	     	 complex (and imaginary) number	arithmetic  support  in	 <com-
		 plex.h>

	     	 type-generic math macros in <tgmath.h>

	     	 the long long int type	and library functions

	     	 remove	implicit int type

	     	 universal character names (\u and \U)

	     	 compound literals

	     	 remove	implicit function declaration

	     	 BCPL style single-line	comments

	     	 allow mixed declarations and code

	     	 the vscanf family of functions	in <stdio.h> and <wchar.h>

	     	 allow trailing	comma in enum declaration

	     	 inline	functions

	     	 the snprintf family of	functions in <stdio.h>

	     	 boolean type and macros in <stdbool.h>

	     	 empty macro arguments

	     	 _Pragma preprocessing operator

	     	 __func__ predefined identifier

	     	 va_copy macro in <stdarg.h>

	     	 additional strftime conversion	specifiers

       Later  in  2011,	 the third edition of the standard, ISO/IEC 1989:2011,
       commonly	referred to as C11 (formerly C1x), came	out and	 replaced  the
       second	  edition     by    ISO/IEC    9899:1999/COR1:2001,    ISO/IEC
       9899:1999/COR2:2004, and	ISO/IEC	9899:1999/COR3:2007.  The improvements
       include (but are	not limited to)	the following:

	     	 support for multiple threads of execution and	atomic	opera-
		 tions in <threads.h> and <stdatomic.h>

	     	 additional floating-point characteristic macros in <float.h>

	     	 querying  and specifying alignment of objects in <stdalign.h>
		 and <stdlib.h>

	     	 Unicode character types and functions in <uchar.h>

	     	 type-generic expressions

	     	 static	assertions in <assert.h>

	     	 anonymous structures and unions

	     	 remove	the gets function from <stdio.h>

	     	 add the aligned_alloc,	at_quick_exit,	and  quick_exit	 func-
		 tions in <stdlib.h>

       C11  was	later superseded by ISO/IEC 9899:2018, also known as C17 which
       was prepared in 2017 and	published in June 2018 as the fourth  edition.
       It     incorporates    the    Technical	  Corrigendum	 1    (ISO/IEC
       9899:2011/COR1:2012) which was published	in 2012.  It addressed defects
       and deficiencies	in C11 without introducing new features, only  correc-
       tions  and  clarifications.   Since there were no major changes in C17,
       the current standard for	Programming Language C,	 is  still  considered
       C11 -- ISO/IEC 9899:2011, published 2011-12-08.

       The  next  standard,  the fifth,	is currently referred to as C2x	and is
       scheduled to be adopted by the end of 2021, with	a publication date  of
       2022.   When  published,	it will	cancel and replace the fourth edition,
       ISO/IEC 9899:2018.

       Some useful features have been provided as extensions by	 some  compil-
       ers, but	they cannot be considered as standard features.

       ISO/IEC JTC1/SC22/WG14 committee	is responsible for the ISO/IEC 9899, C
       Standard.

SEE ALSO
       c89(1), c99(1), cc(1)

STANDARDS
       ANSI, X3.159-1989 (aka C89 or ANSI C).

       ISO/IEC,	9899:1990 (aka C90).

       ISO/IEC,	9899:1990/AMD 1:1995, Amendment	1: C Integrity (aka C95).

       ISO/IEC,	9899:1990/COR 1:1994, Technical	Corrigendum 1.

       ISO/IEC,	9899:1990/COR 2:1996, Technical	Corrigendum 2.

       ISO/IEC,	9899:1999 (aka C99).

       ISO/IEC,	9899:1999/COR 1:2001, Technical	Corrigendum 1.

       ISO/IEC,	9899:1999/COR 2:2004, Technical	Corrigendum 2.

       ISO/IEC,	9899:1999/COR 3:2007, Technical	Corrigendum 3.

       ISO/IEC,	TR 24731-1:2007	(aka bounds-checking interfaces).

       ISO/IEC,	TS 18037:2008 (aka, embedded C).

       ISO/IEC,	TR 24747:2009 (aka mathematical	special	functions).

       ISO/IEC,	TR 24732:2009 (aka decimal floating-point).

       ISO/IEC,	TR 24731-2:2010	(aka dynamic allocation	functions).

       ISO/IEC,	9899:2011 (aka C11).

       ISO/IEC,	9899:2011/COR 1:2012, Technical	Corrigendum 1.

       ISO/IEC,	TS 17961:2013 (aka C secure coding rules).

       ISO/IEC,	TS 18861-1:2014	(aka binary floating-point).

       ISO/IEC,	TS 18861-2:2015	(aka decimal floating-point).

       ISO/IEC,	TS 18861-3:2015	(aka interchange and extended types).

       ISO/IEC,	TS 18861-4:2015	(aka supplementary functions).

       ISO/IEC,	TS 17961:2013/COR 1:2016 (aka C	secure coding rules TC1).

       ISO/IEC,	TS 18861-5:2016	(aka supplementary attributes).

       ISO/IEC,	9899:2018 (aka C17).

HISTORY
       This manual page	first appeared in FreeBSD 9.0.

AUTHORS
       This   manual   page   was   originally	 written   by  Gabor  Kovesdan
       <gabor@FreeBSD.org>.  It	was updated for	FreeBSD	14.0 by	 Faraz	Vahedi
       <kfv@kfv.io> with information about more	recent C standards.

FreeBSD	14.3			April 20, 2021				  C(7)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=c&sektion=7&manpath=FreeBSD+14.3-RELEASE+and+Ports>

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