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C in a Nutshell (In a Nutshell (OReilly))
C in a Nutshell (In a Nutshell (OReilly))
ISBN: 0596006977
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2006
Pages: 473
Authors:
Peter Prinz
,
Tony Crawford
BUY ON AMAZON
C: In a Nutshell
Table of Contents
Copyright
Preface
How This Book Is Organized
Further Reading
Conventions Used in This Book
Using Code Examples
Safari Enabled
Your Questions and Comments
Acknowledgments
Part I: Language
Chapter 1. Language Basics
Section 1.1. Characteristics of C
Section 1.2. The Structure of C Programs
Section 1.3. Source Files
Section 1.4. Comments
Section 1.5. Character Sets
Section 1.6. Identifiers
Section 1.7. How the C Compiler Works
Chapter 2. Types
Section 2.1. Typology
Section 2.2. Integer Types
Section 2.3. Floating-Point Types
Section 2.4. Complex Floating-Point Types (C99)
Section 2.5. Enumerated Types
Section 2.6. The Type void
Chapter 3. Literals
Section 3.1. Integer Constants
Section 3.2. Floating-Point Constants
Section 3.3. Character Constants
Section 3.4. String Literals
Chapter 4. Type Conversions
Section 4.1. Conversion of Arithmetic Types
Section 4.2. Conversion of Nonarithmetic Types
Chapter 5. Expressions and Operators
Section 5.1. How Expressions Are Evaluated
Section 5.2. Operators in Detail
Section 5.3. Constant Expressions
Chapter 6. Statements
Section 6.1. Expression Statements
Section 6.2. Block Statements
Section 6.3. Loops
Section 6.4. Selection Statements
Section 6.5. Unconditional Jumps
Chapter 7. Functions
Section 7.1. Function Definitions
Section 7.2. Function Declarations
Section 7.3. How Functions Are Executed
Section 7.4. Pointers as Arguments and Return Values
Section 7.5. Inline Functions
Section 7.6. Recursive Functions
Section 7.7. Variable Numbers of Arguments
Chapter 8. Arrays
Section 8.1. Defining Arrays
Section 8.2. Accessing Array Elements
Section 8.3. Initializing Arrays
Section 8.4. Strings
Section 8.5. Multidimensional Arrays
Section 8.6. Arrays as Arguments of Functions
Chapter 9. Pointers
Section 9.1. Declaring Pointers
Section 9.2. Operations with Pointers
Section 9.3. Pointers and Type Qualifiers
Section 9.4. Pointers to Arrays and Arrays of Pointers
Section 9.5. Pointers to Functions
Chapter 10. Structures and Unions and Bit-Fields
Section 10.1. Structures
Section 10.2. Unions
Section 10.3. Bit-Fields
Chapter 11. Declarations
Section 11.1. General Syntax
Section 11.2. Type Names
Section 11.3. typedef Declarations
Section 11.4. Linkage of Identifiers
Section 11.5. Storage Duration of Objects
Section 11.6. Initialization
Chapter 12. Dynamic Memory Management
Section 12.1. Allocating Memory Dynamically
Section 12.2. Characteristics of Allocated Memory
Section 12.3. Resizing and Releasing Memory
Section 12.4. An All-Purpose Binary Tree
Section 12.5. Characteristics
Section 12.6. Implementation
Chapter 13. Input and Output
Section 13.1. Streams
Section 13.2. Files
Section 13.3. Opening and Closing Files
Section 13.4. Reading and Writing
Section 13.5. Random File Access
Chapter 14. Preprocessing Directives
Section 14.1. Inserting the Contents of Header Files
Section 14.2. Defining and Using Macros
Section 14.3. Conditional Compiling
Section 14.4. Defining Line Numbers
Section 14.5. Generating Error Messages
Section 14.6. The pragma Directive
Section 14.7. The _Pragma Operator
Section 14.8. Predefined Macros
Part II: Standard Library
Chapter 15. The Standard Headers
Section 15.1. Using the Standard Headers
Section 15.2. Contents of the Standard Headers
Chapter 16. Functions at a Glance
Section 16.1. Input and Output
Section 16.2. Mathematical Functions
Section 16.3. Character Classification and Conversion
Section 16.4. String Processing
Section 16.5. Multibyte Characters
Section 16.6. Converting Between Numbers and Strings
Section 16.7. Searching and Sorting
Section 16.8. Memory Block Handling
Section 16.9. Dynamic Memory Management
Section 16.10. Date and Time
Section 16.11. Process Control
Section 16.12. Internationalization
Section 16.13. Nonlocal Jumps
Section 16.14. Debugging
Section 16.15. Error Messages
Chapter 17. Standard Library Functions
_Exit
abort
abs
acos
acosh
asctime
asin
asinh
assert
atan
atan2
atanh
atexit
atof
atoi
atol, atoll
bsearch
btowc
cabs
cacos
cacosh
calloc
carg
casin
casinh
catan
catanh
cbrt
ccos
ccosh
ceil
cexp
cimag
clearerr
clock
conj
copysign
cos
cosh
cpow
cproj
creal
csin
csinh
csqrt
ctan
ctanh
ctime
difftime
div
erf
erfc
exit
exp
exp2
expm1
fabs
fclose
fdim
feclearexcept
fegetenv
fegetexceptflag
fegetround
feholdexcept
feof
feraiseexcept
ferror
fesetenv
fesetexceptflag
fesetround
fetestexcept
feupdateenv
fflush
fgetc
fgetpos
fgets
fgetwc
fgetws
floor
fma
fmax
fmin
fmod
fopen
fpclassify
fprintf
fputc
fputs
fputwc
fputws
fread
free
freopen
frexp
fscanf
fseek
fsetpos
ftell
fwide
fwprintf
fwscanf
fwrite
getc
getchar
getenv
gets
getwc
getwchar
gmtime
hypot
ilogb
imaxabs
imaxdiv
isalnum
isalpha
isblank
iscntrl
isdigit
isfinite
isgraph
isgreater, isgreaterequal
isinf
isless, islessequal, islessgreater
islower
isnan
isnormal
isprint
ispunct
isspace
isunordered
isupper
iswalnum
iswalpha
iswblank
iswcntrl
iswctype
iswdigit
iswgraph
iswlower
iswprint
iswpunct
iswspace
iswupper
iswxdigit
isxdigit
labs
ldexp
ldiv
llabs
lldiv
llrint
llround
localeconv
localtime
log
log10
log1p
log2
logb
longjmp
lrint
lround
malloc
mblen
mbrlen
mbrtowc
mbsinit
mbsrtowcs
mbstowcs
mbtowc
memchr
memcmp
memcpy
memmove
memset
mktime
modf
nearbyint
nextafter
nexttoward
perror
pow
printf
putc
putchar
puts
putwc
putwchar
qsort
raise
rand
realloc
remainder
remove
remquo
rename
rewind
rint
round
scalbln, scalbn
scanf
setbuf
setjmp
setlocale
setvbuf
signal
signbit
sin
sinh
snprintf
sprintf
sqrt
srand
sscanf
strcat
strchr
strcmp
strcoll
strcpy
strcspn
strerror
strftime
strlen
strncat
strncmp
strncpy
strpbrk
strrchr
strspn
strstr
strtod, strtof, strtold
strtoimax
strtok
strtol, strtoll
strtoul, strtoull
strtoumax
strxfrm
swprintf
swscanf
system
tan
tanh
time
tmpfile
tmpnam
tolower
toupper
towctrans
towlower
towupper
trunc
ungetc
ungetwc
va_arg, va_copy, va_end, va_start
vfprintf, vprintf, vsnprintf, vsprintf
vfscanf, vscanf, vsscanf
vfwprintf, vswprintf, vwprintf
vfwscanf, vswscanf, vwscanf
wcrtomb
wcscat
wcschr
wcscmp
wcscoll
wcscpy
wcscspn
wcsftime
wcslen
wcsncat
wcsncmp
wcsncpy
wcspbrk
wcsrchr
wcsrtombs
wcsspn
wcsstr
wcstod, wcstof, wcstold
wcstoimax
wcstok
wcstol, wcstoll
wcstold
wcstoll
wcstombs
wcstoul, wcstoull
wcstoumax
wcsxfrm
wctob
wctomb
wctrans
wctype
wmemchr
wmemcmp
wmemcpy
wmemmove
wmemset
wprintf
wscanf
Part III: Basic Tools
Chapter 18. Compiling with GCC
Section 18.1. The GNU Compiler Collection
Section 18.2. Obtaining and Installing GCC
Section 18.3. Compiling C Programs with GCC
Section 18.4. C Dialects
Section 18.5. Compiler Warnings
Section 18.6. Optimization
Section 18.7. Debugging
Section 18.8. Profiling
Section 18.9. Option and Environment Variable Summary
Chapter 19. Using make to Build C Programs
Section 19.1. Targets, Prerequisites, and Commands
Section 19.2. The Makefile
Section 19.3. Rules
Section 19.4. Comments
Section 19.5. Variables
Section 19.6. Phony Targets
Section 19.7. Other Target Attributes
Section 19.8. Macros
Section 19.9. Functions
Section 19.10. Directives
Section 19.11. Running make
Chapter 20. Debugging C Programs with GDB
Section 20.1. Installing GDB
Section 20.2. A Sample Debugging Session
Section 20.3. Starting GDB
Section 20.4. Using GDB Commands
About the Authors
Colophon
Index
SYMBOL
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
C in a Nutshell (In a Nutshell (OReilly))
ISBN: 0596006977
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2006
Pages: 473
Authors:
Peter Prinz
,
Tony Crawford
BUY ON AMAZON
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Discovering Schema Information at Runtime
Managing User Account Features
Appendix C. Troubleshooting and Help
Professional Java Native Interfaces with SWT/JFace (Programmer to Programmer)
Jump Start with SWT/JFace
Combos and Lists
Other Important SWT Components
SWT Graphics and Image Handling
JFace Windows and Dialogs
Programming Microsoft ASP.NET 3.5
ASP.NET Core Server Controls
Paging Through Data Sources
ASP.NET Security
Data-Bound and Templated Controls
Working with Images in ASP.NET
GO! with Microsoft Office 2003 Brief (2nd Edition)
Objective 9. Use the Microsoft Help System
Using Graphics and Tables
Concepts Assessments
Introduction
Objective 2. Choose an Excel Worksheet as a Data Source
Information Dashboard Design: The Effective Visual Communication of Data
Encoding Quantitative Data Inaccurately
Tapping into the Power of Visual Perception
Make the Viewing Experience Aesthetically Pleasing
Putting It All Together
Sample Marketing Analysis Dashboard
Extending and Embedding PHP
Building PHP
Arg Info and Type-hinting
Methods
Cycles
Re-creating CLI by Wrapping Embed
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