17 Aug 2008
mybrainsgrowell with wilfredo galeano genes
mybrainsgrowell with tarik el janaby
12 Jul 2008
7 Jul 2008
Hello World
It is used in many introductory tutorials for teaching a programming language. Such a program is typically one of the simplest programs possible in a computer language.
The phrase “Hello, world!” was born of Brian Kernighan’s idea. After Kernighan had published his programming manual “The C Programming Language” in 1978, it became tradition-learning a programming language - to write a programme as a first step, that produces the “Hello, world!” sequence of characters on the screen. This has been a simple exercise to gain first insights into the syntactical demands of a program-ming language. “Hello, world!” thus symbolizes the first moment of acquiring a technology.[1]
And this is the first post at this site, seems wonder full. Bla.. bla.. bla.. Bismillah.
The phrase “Hello, world!” was born of Brian Kernighan’s idea. After Kernighan had published his programming manual “The C Programming Language” in 1978, it became tradition-learning a programming language - to write a programme as a first step, that produces the “Hello, world!” sequence of characters on the screen. This has been a simple exercise to gain first insights into the syntactical demands of a program-ming language. “Hello, world!” thus symbolizes the first moment of acquiring a technology.[1]
And this is the first post at this site, seems wonder full. Bla.. bla.. bla.. Bismillah.
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