using the C programming language in conjunction with the Windows application programming
interface (API). While it is true that numerous applications have been successfully created using this
complex undertaking.
The first obvious problem is that C is a very terse language. C developers are forced to contend
with manual memory management, ugly pointer arithmetic, and ugly syntactical constructs. Fur-
thermore, given that C is a structured language, it lacks the benefits provided by the object-oriented
approach (can anyone say
spaghetti code?). When you combine the thousands
of global functions
and data types defined by the Win32 API to an already formidable language, it is little wonder that
there are so many buggy applications floating around today.
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