Chris,
To add to what everyone else has said, Microsoft has released Express
Editions of most of their compilers. Also, you can pickup Visual Studio
Academic edition pretty cheaply at UNO's bookstore. If you want to avoid
MS, I believe Borland is in the process of doing the same.
Jonathan
On 8/18/06, Chris Johnston <cmjohnston@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> Hash: SHA1
>
> I will be starting UNO as an engineering major in the spring semester.
> In engineering you are required to know some programming and as a
> prerequisite you must take a programming class and I believe they teach
> C,C+,or C++ and I would like to know if you can run and compile C code
> in Linux? Windows requires you to purchase expensive programs to do this
> I think I remember reading somewhere that this was built into Linux. Is
> this correct?
>
> Chris Johnston
> http://christopherjohnston.blogspot.com
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
> Version: GnuPG v1.4.5 (MingW32)
> Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org
>
> iD8DBQFE5maBk+avcqlQhokRAuYzAJoDGEN4n1UbJYNXjpKz3klP7Prg4wCeNQUo
> FcEMDeXAS73wYxg3Exwp4k8=
> =gi2a
> -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
> ___________________
> Nolug mailing list
> nolug@nolug.org
>
___________________
Nolug mailing list
nolug@nolug.org
Received on 08/18/06
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.2.0 : 12/19/08 EST