C Sharp

From Just Solve the File Format Problem
(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
(Links)
Line 5: Line 5:
 
|released=2000
 
|released=2000
 
}}
 
}}
 +
{{DISPLAYTITLE:C#}}
 
'''C#''' is a language derived from [[C]]. It is one of several C derivatives to add object-oriented features (others include [[C++]] and [[Objective-C]]). C# also features strong typing, which doesn't refer to pounding hard on the keyboard; rather, it means that data types are strictly defined and enforced, preventing programmers from sending incompatible data types to functions (or object methods) that are designed for different types. In contrast, regular C is very weakly typed, allowing just about anything to be passed anywhere and relying on the programmer's discipline to keep from sending data that makes no sense.
 
'''C#''' is a language derived from [[C]]. It is one of several C derivatives to add object-oriented features (others include [[C++]] and [[Objective-C]]). C# also features strong typing, which doesn't refer to pounding hard on the keyboard; rather, it means that data types are strictly defined and enforced, preventing programmers from sending incompatible data types to functions (or object methods) that are designed for different types. In contrast, regular C is very weakly typed, allowing just about anything to be passed anywhere and relying on the programmer's discipline to keep from sending data that makes no sense.
  

Revision as of 23:19, 11 May 2015

File Format
Name C Sharp
Ontology
Extension(s) .cs
Released 2000


C# is a language derived from C. It is one of several C derivatives to add object-oriented features (others include C++ and Objective-C). C# also features strong typing, which doesn't refer to pounding hard on the keyboard; rather, it means that data types are strictly defined and enforced, preventing programmers from sending incompatible data types to functions (or object methods) that are designed for different types. In contrast, regular C is very weakly typed, allowing just about anything to be passed anywhere and relying on the programmer's discipline to keep from sending data that makes no sense.

C# was introduced by Microsoft in conjunction with the .NET application framework, but has since been standardized by ECMA and ISO.

Links

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox