Course pages 2017–18
Subsections
Programming in C
Lecturer: Dr N. Krishnaswami
No. of lectures: 10
Suggested hours of supervisions: 3
Prerequisite courses: None, though Operating Systems would be helpful.
Aims
The aims of this course are to provide a solid introduction to programming in C and to provide an overview of the principles and constraints that affect the way in which the C programming language has been designed and is used.
Lectures
- Introduction to the C language. Background and goals of C. Types and variables. Expressions and statements. Functions. Multiple compilation units. [1 lecture]
- Further C concepts. Preprocessor. Pointers and pointer arithmetic. Data structures. Dynamic memory management. Examples. [2 lectures]
- Linkers and loaders. Executable sections. Debug symbols. Inspecting program state. [1 lecture]
- C semantics. Undefined vs implementation-defined behaviour. Common optimisation problems. Buffer and integer overflows. Examples. [1 lecture]
Objectives
At the end of the course students should
- be able to read and write C programs;
- understand the interaction between C programs and the host operating system;
- be familiar with the structure of C program execution in machine memory;
- understand the potential dangers of writing programs in C.
Recommended reading
* Kernighan, B.W. & Ritchie, D.M. (1988). The C programming language. Prentice Hall (2nd ed.).