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ANSI C, ISO C, and Standard C are successive standards for the C programming language published by the
American National Standards Institute The American National Standards Institute (ANSI ) is a private nonprofit organization that oversees the development of voluntary consensus standards for products, services, processes, systems, and personnel in the United States. The organiz ...
(ANSI) and ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 22/WG 14 of the
International Organization for Standardization The International Organization for Standardization (ISO ; ; ) is an independent, non-governmental, international standard development organization composed of representatives from the national standards organizations of member countries. M ...
(ISO) and the
International Electrotechnical Commission The International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC; ) is an international standards organization that prepares and publishes international standards for all electrical, electronics, electronic and related technologies. IEC standards cover a va ...
(IEC). Historically, the names referred specifically to the original and best-supported version of the standard (known as C89 or C90). Software developers writing in C are encouraged to conform to the standards, as doing so helps portability between compilers.


History and outlook

The first standard for C was published by ANSI. Although this document was subsequently adopted by ISO/IEC and subsequent revisions published by ISO/IEC have been adopted by ANSI, "ANSI C" is still used to refer to the standard. While some software developers use the term ISO C, others are standards-body neutral and use Standard C.


Informal specification: K&R C (''C78'')

Informal specification in 1978 (
Brian Kernighan Brian Wilson Kernighan (; born January 30, 1942) is a Canadian computer scientist. He worked at Bell Labs and contributed to the development of Unix alongside Unix creators Ken Thompson and Dennis Ritchie. Kernighan's name became widely known ...
and Dennis Ritchie book '' The C Programming Language'').


Standardizing C

In 1983, the American National Standards Institute formed a committee, X3J11, to establish a standard specification of C. In 1985, the first Standard Draft was released, sometimes referred to as ''C85''. In 1986, another Draft Standard was released, sometimes referred to as ''C86''. The prerelease Standard C was published in 1988, and sometimes referred to as ''C88''.


C89

The ANSI standard was completed in 1989 and ratified as ANSI X3.159-1989 "Programming Language C." This version of the language is often referred to as "ANSI C". Later on sometimes the label "C89" is used to distinguish it from C90 but using the same labeling method.


C90

The same standard as C89 was ratified by ISO/IEC as ISO/IEC 9899:1990, with only formatting changes, which is sometimes referred to as C90. Therefore, the terms "C89" and "C90" refer to a language that is virtually identical. This standard has been withdrawn by both ANSI/INCITS and ISO/IEC.


C95

In 1995, the
ISO The International Organization for Standardization (ISO ; ; ) is an independent, non-governmental, international standard development organization composed of representatives from the national standards organizations of member countries. Me ...
/ IEC published an extension, called Amendment 1, for the C standard. Its full name finally was ''ISO/IEC 9899:1990/AMD1:1995'' or nicknamed ''C95''. Aside from error correction there were further changes to the language capabilities, such as: * Improved ''multi-byte'' and '' wide character'' support in the standard library, introducing and as well as multi-byte I/O * Addition of digraphs to the language * Specification of standard macros for the alternative specification of operators, e.g. and for && * Specification of the standard macro __STDC_VERSION__ In addition to the amendment, two technical corrigenda were published by ISO for C90: * ISO/IEC 9899:1990/Cor 1:1994 TCOR1 in 1994 * ISO/IEC 9899:1990/Cor 2:1996 in 1996


Preprocessor test for C95 compatibility

#if defined(__STDC_VERSION__) && __STDC_VERSION__ >= 199409L /* C95 compatible source code. */ #elif defined(__STDC__) /* C89 compatible source code. */ #endif


C99

In March 2000, ANSI adopted the ISO/IEC 9899:1999 standard. This standard is commonly referred to as C99. Some notable additions to the previous standard include: * New built-in
data types In computer science and computer programming, a data type (or simply type) is a collection or grouping of data values, usually specified by a set of possible values, a set of allowed operations on these values, and/or a representation of these ...
: long long, _Bool, _Complex, and _Imaginary * Several new core language features, including static array indices, designated initializers, compound literals, variable-length arrays, flexible array members, variadic macros, and restrict keyword * Several new library headers, including stdint.h, <tgmath.h>, fenv.h, <complex.h> * Improved compatibility with several C++ features, including
inline function In the C (programming language), C and C++ programming languages, an inline function is one qualified with the Keyword (computer programming), keyword inline; this serves two purposes: # It serves as a compiler directive that suggests (but doe ...
s, single-line comments with //, mixing declarations and code, and universal character names in
identifiers An identifier is a name that identifies (that is, labels the identity of) either a unique object or a unique ''class'' of objects, where the "object" or class may be an idea, person, physical countable object (or class thereof), or physical mass ...
* Removed several dangerous C89 language features such as implicit function declarations and implicit int Three technical corrigenda were published by ISO for C99: * ISO/IEC 9899:1999/Cor 1:2001(E) * ISO/IEC 9899:1999/Cor 2:2004(E) * ISO/IEC 9899:1999/Cor 3:2007(E), notable for deprecating the standard library function gets This standard has been withdrawn by both ANSI/INCITS and ISO/IEC in favour of C11.


C11

C11 was officially ratified and published on December 8, 2011. Notable features include improved
Unicode Unicode or ''The Unicode Standard'' or TUS is a character encoding standard maintained by the Unicode Consortium designed to support the use of text in all of the world's writing systems that can be digitized. Version 16.0 defines 154,998 Char ...
support, type-generic expressions using the new _Generic keyword, a cross-platform multi-threading API (threads.h), and atomic types support in both core language and the library (stdatomic.h). One technical corrigendum has been published by ISO for C11: * ISO/IEC 9899:2011/Cor 1:2012


C17

C17 was published in June 2018. Rather than introducing new language features, it only addresses defects in C11.


C23

C23 was published in October 2024, and is the current standard for the C programming language.


Other related ISO publications

As part of the standardization process, ISO/IEC also publishes technical reports and specifications related to the C language: * ISO/IEC TR 19769:2004, on library extensions to support Unicode transformation formats, integrated into C11 * ISO/IEC TR 24731-1:2007, on library extensions to support bounds-checked interfaces, integrated into C11 * ISO/IEC TR 18037:2008, on embedded C extensions * ISO/IEC TR 24732:2009, on
decimal floating point Decimal floating-point (DFP) arithmetic refers to both a representation and operations on Decimal data type, decimal floating-point numbers. Working directly with decimal (base-10) fractions can avoid the rounding errors that otherwise typically ...
arithmetic, superseded by ISO/IEC TS 18661-2:2015 * ISO/IEC TR 24747:2009, on special mathematical functions, * ISO/IEC TR 24731-2:2010, on library extensions to support dynamic allocation functions * ISO/IEC TS 17961:2013, on secure coding in C * ISO/IEC TS 18661-1:2014, on IEC 60559:2011-compatible binary floating-point arithmetic * ISO/IEC TS 18661-2:2015, on IEC 60559:2011-compatible
decimal floating point Decimal floating-point (DFP) arithmetic refers to both a representation and operations on Decimal data type, decimal floating-point numbers. Working directly with decimal (base-10) fractions can avoid the rounding errors that otherwise typically ...
arithmetic * ISO/IEC TS 18661-3:2015, on IEC 60559:2011-compatible interchange and extended floating-point types * ISO/IEC TS 18661-4:2015, on IEC 60559:2011-compatible supplementary functions More technical specifications are in development and pending approval, including the fifth and final part of TS 18661, a software transactional memory specification, and parallel library extensions.


Support from major compilers

ANSI C is supported by almost all the widely used compilers. GCC and Clang are two major C compilers popular today, both based on the C11 with updates including changes from later specifications such as C17. Any source code written ''only'' in standard C and without any hardware dependent assumptions is virtually guaranteed to compile correctly on any platform with a conforming C implementation. Without such precautions, most programs may compile only on a certain platform or with a particular compiler, due, for example, to the use of non-standard libraries, such as GUI libraries, or to the reliance on compiler- or platform-specific attributes such as the exact size of certain data types and byte
endianness file:Gullivers_travels.jpg, ''Gulliver's Travels'' by Jonathan Swift, the novel from which the term was coined In computing, endianness is the order in which bytes within a word (data type), word of digital data are transmitted over a data comm ...
.


Compliance detectability

To mitigate the differences between K&R C and the ANSI C standard, the __STDC__ ("standard c") macro can be used to split code into ANSI and K&R sections. #if defined(__STDC__) && __STDC__ extern int getopt(int, char * const *, const char *); #else extern int getopt(); #endif In the above example, a prototype is used in a function declaration for ANSI compliant implementations, while an obsolescent non-prototype declaration is used otherwise. Those are still ANSI-compliant as of C99. Note how this code checks both definition and evaluation: this is because some implementations may set __STDC__ to zero to indicate non-ANSI compliance.


Compiler support

List of compilers supporting ANSI C: * Acornsoft ANSI C (first version in 1988, revised in 1989) * Amsterdam Compiler Kit (C K&R and C89/90) * ARM RealView *
Clang Clang () is a compiler front end for the programming languages C, C++, Objective-C, Objective-C++, and the software frameworks OpenMP, OpenCL, RenderScript, CUDA, SYCL, and HIP. It acts as a drop-in replacement for the GNU Compiler ...
(full C89/C90, partial C99, C11, C17, C23 and C2y), using
LLVM LLVM, also called LLVM Core, is a target-independent optimizer and code generator. It can be used to develop a Compiler#Front end, frontend for any programming language and a Compiler#Back end, backend for any instruction set architecture. LLVM i ...
backend * GCC (full C89/90, C99, C11, partial C17 and some C23 and experimental/incomplete C2y) * HP C/ANSI C compiler (C89 and C99) * IBM XL C/C++ (C11, starting with version 12.1) * Intel's ICC (later versions are based on
clang Clang () is a compiler front end for the programming languages C, C++, Objective-C, Objective-C++, and the software frameworks OpenMP, OpenCL, RenderScript, CUDA, SYCL, and HIP. It acts as a drop-in replacement for the GNU Compiler ...
, and have its support!-- or more or less, seemingly missing some support/or table wrong, not updated? And can have more support than clang despite when using it? -->) * LabWindows/CVI * LCC * Oracle Developer Studio * OpenWatcom (C89/90 and some C99) * Microsoft Visual C++ (C89/90 and some C99, C11, C17, mostly missing C23) * Pelles C (C99 and C11. Windows only.)link to Pelles C pages
/ref> *
vbcc vbcc is a portable and retargetable ANSI C compiler. It supports C89 (C version), C89 (ISO/IEC 9899:1989) as well as parts of C99 (ISO/IEC 9899:1999). It is divided into two parts. One is target-independent and the other is target-dependent. vb ...
(C89/90 and C99) * Tiny C Compiler (C89/90 and some C99)


See also

* Behavioral Description Language * Compatibility of C and C++ * C++23, C++20, C++17, C++14,
C++11 C++11 is a version of a joint technical standard, ISO/IEC 14882, by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), for the C++ programming language. C++11 replaced the prior vers ...
, C++03, C++98, versions of the C++ programming language standard * C++ Technical Report 1


References


Further reading

*


External links


ISO C working group

''Draft ANSI C Standard'' (ANSI X3J11/88-090)
(May 13, 1988)
Third Public Review

''Draft ANSI C Rationale'' (ANSI X3J11/88-151)
(Nov 18, 1988)
''C Information Bulletin #1'' (ANSI X3J11/93-007)
(May 27, 1992)

*

{{DEFAULTSORT:Ansi C American National Standards Institute standards C (programming language) Programming language standards