Difference between revisions of "Subroutine package"

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For example, on early machines which did not support [[floating point]] in [[hardware]], it was common to have a floating point library. For commercial applications, which often use [[binary-coded decimal]] for arbitrary-[[precision]] numbers, a library implementing them was often provided on machines which lacked hardware support for BCD.
 
For example, on early machines which did not support [[floating point]] in [[hardware]], it was common to have a floating point library. For commercial applications, which often use [[binary-coded decimal]] for arbitrary-[[precision]] numbers, a library implementing them was often provided on machines which lacked hardware support for BCD.
  
In the [[C (programming language)|C]] [[programming language]], which does not include I/O as part of the language, the [[Standard I/O Library]] is a [[portable]] library which provides a standard way to peform I/O on many systems which C runs on.
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In the [[C programming language]], which does not include [[input/output]] as part of the language, the [[standard I/O library]] is a [[portable]] library which provides a standard way to perform I/O on many systems which C runs on.
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[[Category: Software Basics]]

Latest revision as of 23:58, 31 December 2022

A subroutine package (often called a 'library') is a group of subroutines which support some particular functionality.

For example, on early machines which did not support floating point in hardware, it was common to have a floating point library. For commercial applications, which often use binary-coded decimal for arbitrary-precision numbers, a library implementing them was often provided on machines which lacked hardware support for BCD.

In the C programming language, which does not include input/output as part of the language, the standard I/O library is a portable library which provides a standard way to perform I/O on many systems which C runs on.