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  2. C character classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_character_classification

    C character classification is a group of operations in the C standard library that test a character for membership in a particular class of characters; such as alphabetic, control, etc. Both single-byte, and wide characters are supported.

  3. Format (Common Lisp) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Format_(Common_Lisp)

    Format is a function in Common Lisp that can produce formatted text using a format string similar to the print format string.It provides more functionality than print, allowing the user to output numbers in various formats (including, for instance: hex, binary, octal, roman numerals, and English), apply certain format specifiers only under certain conditions, iterate over data structures ...

  4. scanf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scanf

    The formatting placeholders in scanf are more or less the same as that in printf, its reverse function.As in printf, the POSIX extension n$ is defined. [2]There are rarely constants (i.e., characters that are not formatting placeholders) in a format string, mainly because a program is usually not designed to read known data, although scanf does accept these if explicitly specified.

  5. printf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Printf

    x uses lower-case letters and X uses upper-case. o: unsigned int in octal. s: null-terminated string. c: char . p: void* (pointer to void) in an implementation-defined format. a, A: double in hexadecimal notation, starting with 0x or 0X. a uses lower-case letters, A uses upper-case letters.

  6. Case sensitivity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Case_sensitivity

    The lowercase "a" and uppercase "A" are the two case variants of the first letter in the English alphabet.. In computers, case sensitivity defines whether uppercase and lowercase letters are treated as distinct (case-sensitive) or equivalent (case-insensitive).

  7. C string handling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_string_handling

    The length of a string is the number of code units before the zero code unit. [1] The memory occupied by a string is always one more code unit than the length, as space is needed to store the zero terminator. Generally, the term string means a string where the code unit is of type char, which is exactly 8 bits on all modern machines.

  8. Basic Latin (Unicode block) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_Latin_(Unicode_block)

    C Latin Capital letter C: U+0044 D Latin Capital letter D: U+0045 E ... Lowercase Latin Alphabet: 26 unaccented Latin letters in the minuscule. U+0061 to U+007A

  9. Naming convention (programming) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naming_convention...

    In C and C++, keywords and standard library identifiers are mostly lowercase. In the C standard library, abbreviated names are the most common (e.g. isalnum for a function testing whether a character is alphanumeric), while the C++ standard library often uses an underscore as a word separator (e.g. out_of_range).