I have started programming practice on codechef and have been confused by the difference between C and C99. What does C mean here? Is it C89? Check the languages at the bottom of this submit. It contains both C and C99.
I found on the internet something called GNU C. Is there a different C for linux/unix systems? Are these compliant to the C standards by ANSI? I have also read in some places "C99 strict". What is this?
Are there any other different standards of C in use? Is there something called C 4.3.2 or is it the gcc version in current use?
EDIT:
This, This, This helped. I'll search more and edit the things that are left unanswered.
I am not a programming newbie. I know what C language is. I know that there are the different C standards by ANSI like C89, C99 and C11.
C is a general-purpose programming language. C is one of the oldest currently used programming languages and is one of the most widely used programming languages. ANSI C is a set of successive standards which were published by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) for the C programming language.
C89. The ANSI standard was completed in 1989 and ratified as ANSI X3. 159-1989 "Programming Language C." This version of the language is often referred to as "ANSI C". Later on sometimes the label "C89" is used to distinguish it from C90 but using the same labeling method.
Technically, ANSI C is an outdated dialect (almost 30 years old!
Let's continue with a discussion of all the five different standards of C — K&R C, ANSI C, C99, C11 and Embedded C. For the purposes of our discussion, the compiler used is the gcc C compiler from the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC). If there are five different standards for C, which one is the default standard of gcc?
Everything before standardization is generally called "K&R C", after the famous book (1st edition and 2nd edition), with Dennis Ritchie, the inventor of the C language, as one of the authors. This was "the C language" from 1972-1989.
The first C standard was released 1989 nationally in USA, by their national standard institute ANSI. This release is called C89 or ANSI-C. From 1989-1990 this was "the C language".
The year after, the American standard was accepted internationally and published by ISO (ISO 9899:1990). This release is called C90. Technically, it is the same standard as C89/ANSI-C. Formally, it replaced C89/ANSI-C, making them obsolete. From 1990-1999, C90 was "the C language".
Please note that since 1989, ANSI haven't had anything to do with the C language. Programmers still speaking about "ANSI C" generally haven't got a clue about what it means. ISO "owns" the C language, through the standard ISO 9899.
A minor update was released in 1995, sometimes referred to as "C95". This was not a major revision, but rather a technical amendment formally named ISO/IEC 9899:1990/Amd.1:1995. The main change was introduction of wide character support.
In 1999, the C standard went through a major revision (ISO 9899:1999). This version of the standard is called C99. From 1999-2011, this was "the C language".
In 2011, the C standard was changed again (ISO 9899:2011). This version is called C11. Various new features like _Generic
, _Static_assert
and thread support were added to the language. The update had a lot of focus on multi-core, multi-processing and expression sequencing. From 2011-2017, this was "the C language".
In 2017, C11 was revised and various defect reports were solved. This standard is informally called C17 or C18. It was finished in 2017 (and uses __STDC_VERSION__
= 201710L
) but was released by ISO as 9899:2018, hence the ambiguity between C17/C18. It contains no new features, just corrections. It is the current version of the C language.
"C99 strict" likely refers to a compiler setting forcing a compiler to follow the standard by the letter. There is a term conforming implementation in the C standard. Essentially it means: "this compiler actually implements the C language correctly". Programs that implement the C language correctly are formally called strictly conforming programs.
"GNU C" can mean two things. Either the C compiler itself that comes as part of the GNU Compiler Collection (GCC). Or it can mean the non-standard default setup that the GCC C compiler uses. If you compile with gcc program.c
then you don't compile according to the C standard, but rather a non-standard GNU setup, which may be referred to as "GNU C". For example, the whole Linux kernel is made in non-standard GNU C, and not in standard C.
If you want to compile your programs according to the C standard, you should type gcc -std=c99 -pedantic-errors
. Replace c99 with c11 if your GCC version supports it.
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