A user suggested, as I quoted an exercise from K&R's The C Programming Language, that I should use a more modern book. Any suggestions from other stackoverflow users?

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I have to say, not knowing that particular user I have to disagree if you are attempting to learn C. If you're attempting to learn UNIX/POSIX interfaces that's another matter of course. – Billy ONeal Nov 12 '10 at 18:54
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There is a list of recommended books in The Definitive C Book Guide and List. That said, I don't see anything wrong with learning C from K&R. I learned C from K&R not too long ago (note: C is not my primary programming language, so my opinion should be taken with a sack of salt). – James McNellis Nov 12 '10 at 18:55
A similar question was posted [here][1]. [1]: stackoverflow.com/q/4170140/267126 – Sean Reifschneider Nov 13 '10 at 3:28
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The C language really hasn't changed much. It's the libraries that have changed. So, you probably will want a simple C language book, which I think K&R is a good example of, and references for various libraries in the areas that you wish to work. The library references should be recent. – Sean Reifschneider Nov 13 '10 at 3:31
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After twenty years I still use K&R 2nd Edition as my primary reference. – Ether Nov 13 '10 at 16:34
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3 Answers

up vote 8 down vote accepted

The main problem with K&R2 is that it doesn't cover C99. This isn't a fatal flaw (C99 adoption is not universal; most notably Visual Studio doesn't support it), but if you are using C99, you will want to find at least a companion reference (such as Harbison & Steele's "C: A Reference Manual", 5th edition).

As a basic introduction to the language, K&R2 is still one of the better ones out there.

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C99 makes C a much less arduous language. IMO it's worth teaching to beginners so they aren't so turned off by some of C89's ridiculousness. – Conrad Meyer Nov 12 '10 at 19:12
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Modern does not mean "better," it just means "more recent." K&R is a fine book with good concepts and insights.

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Probably Herbert Schildt can be useful^W^W^W.

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Oooh, that's going to hurt you. – Hans Passant Nov 12 '10 at 19:00
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At least IMO, K&R 1 would still be more useful than anything by Herbert ScHIldT. At one time, the C standard cost ~$250. The C standard with annotations by Herbert ScHIldT cost ~$40. The difference in price accurately reflected the value of his annotations. – Jerry Coffin Nov 12 '10 at 19:04
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Sorry, fellows. Maybe Schildt is bad but his book is pretty goo as manpages. I read it after K&R and can say that these books are from different categories. – Violette Nov 12 '10 at 19:07
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@Violette: This is the problem: he's really a great author -- but what he writes is fiction. What he writes about C doesn't necessarily have much to do with reality. – Jerry Coffin Nov 12 '10 at 19:24
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Bullschildt! – James McNellis Nov 12 '10 at 20:47
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