= C
{c}
{disambiguate=programming language}
{title2=1972}
{wiki=C++}
= C
{c}
{disambiguate=language}
{synonym}
It gets the job done, but cannot make a large codebase DRY without insanity.
As of 2020, C is like <Latin>, and we are in the <Middle Ages>, where it has become a <lingua franca>.
It is interesting to note how late C appeared: 1972, compared e.g. to <Fortran> which is from 1957. This is basically because C was a "systems programming language", i.e. with focus on pointer manipulation, and because early computers were so weak, there was no operating system or many software layers in the early days. Fortran however was a numerical language, and it ran directly on bare metal, an application that existed before systems programming.
Examples under \a[c].
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