project-based-tutorials-in-c
awesome-c
project-based-tutorials-in-c | awesome-c | |
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38 | 19 | |
8,354 | 8,582 | |
- | - | |
5.4 | 4.9 | |
over 2 years ago | about 1 month ago | |
- | Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
project-based-tutorials-in-c
- Where can I learn C with hands-on practice?
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Solid Foundations C and Programming
My experience with "C Primer Plus" was a good one I found it very nicely explained, and it's wordy as it explains everything to the details, and with every example, there is a new programming idea. I don't know your studying technique but I suggest you implement every example by yourself. Nevertheless, you could give CS50 a try, it's without saying one of the best introductory courses, and also take a look at "Learn C the hard way" there are also videos accompanied by the book, which is pretty good in my opinion since you don't want something "wordy". And pick a project it will help you with your learning journey as learning without implementation is just half learning. - Project based learning - Project-based tutorials in C - Build your own X
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Collection of free books to learn C, java, python, bash, ethical hacking with python, oracle database.. i found today, (google drive link, +60MB)
Project based tutorials in C. This is awesome.
- What are some beginner level C programming projects?
- I have just finished learning basic C language. Now which problems should I solve? And any ideas for beginners project. Thank you.
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End of the year Resource collection
For those of you that so not know it already, there is a collection of C projects (ongoing and finished) by rby90 on GitHub
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Help in choosing C library
Usually you fit the library to the project, not the project to the library. Just pick something that interests you, maybe even re-do a C++ project in C instead. If you really need ideas, here is a list that can help you.
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Any website similar to Jetbrains Academy but for C?
Projects
- I learned basic and...
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Beginner projects
I recommend you have a look through this list for inspiration : https://github.com/rby90/project-based-tutorials-in-c
awesome-c
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Learning C in 2023
https://github.com/oz123/awesome-c#learning-reference-and-tu...
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I want to be better at programming
So, let’s go through an example. Since you’re used to using C, I’d suggest looking through the awesome-C repo. From there, you might decide you’re interested in graphics, so you check out OpenGL.
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What can you actually do in C?
Awesome C - oz123
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C Documentation
You can find a lot of resources at oz123 / awesome-c and this [https://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/programming-9/c-c-tutorials-825748/](C/C++ Tutorials thread).
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Updated book to learn C
For example, you can use the C language with sds strings (see https://github.com/antirez/sds) if you want to have an easier time with string formatting and don't want to worry about using the famously unsafe string.h functions correctly. You'll still program in ISO C, but just not in the standard library. The same applies to pretty much all parts of the standard library, the only part unsurpassed is pretty much just printf and the math headers (math.h, fenv.h, tgmath.h, complex.h) imo, and the occasional call to exit. A good place to look for libraries if you want to go that route is the awesome-c collection: https://github.com/oz123/awesome-c
- Not to sound like a broken record but are there any good and interesting open source projects in C?
- Cool C projects
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Ask HN: Modern C Libraries
There's an awesome C list of libraries and frameworks [1]. Pick one that suits your needs.
Time and again folks say such and such isn't suitable tool to do something. While some of those admonitions are true, if you're doing something to learn, feel free to ignore those and enjoy your learning. There're folks who learn assembly even today and learn a great deal of other things than assembly and have fun too.
As for C, it'd recommend most folks know the basics since many "modern" languages totally don't teach you those, and in fact hide the details from you that things feel like magic to you eventually if you keep using these high-level languages. This is okay as long as you can know the basics and map them back when needed.
[1]: https://github.com/oz123/awesome-c
- Recommend some non-standard libraries for the C programming language.
- Any website that lists all the available libraries for C?
What are some alternatives?
project-based-learning - Curated list of project-based tutorials
kcgi - minimal CGI and FastCGI library for C/C++
DOOM - DOOM Open Source Release
single_file_libs - List of single-file C/C++ libraries.
mal - mal - Make a Lisp
awk - One true awk
project-based-learnin
stb - stb single-file public domain libraries for C/C++
app-ideas - A Collection of application ideas which can be used to improve your coding skills.
2048.wasm - 2048 written in C and compiled to WebAssembly
MinecraftC - A Raytraced Minecraft Classic 0.0.30a port to C
awesome-cpp - A curated list of awesome C++ (or C) frameworks, libraries, resources, and shiny things. Inspired by awesome-... stuff.