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PS I synthesize here in my own words what K&R teach, re-write all their example programs, character by character, solve all the C exercises they hand out. I comment to what K&R teach cursively. I do not copy-paste anything from the book! In regards to the percentages listed: books often have prefaces with Roman numbers and often also lengthy Appendices. In my calculation I include all pages that I effectively study and synthesize.

TCPL 2Ed - Page 006 to 007 - 4.15% Completion

A C program constitutes variables and functions. A function consists of statements which specify the operations that the computer should do and which, together, define the function. Variables store values used by these operations.
'main' is a special function that every C program must include. All other functions reside in main. Main calls in other functions: some of which the programmer writes and others from libraries, such as stdio.h, which is the standard input/output library.

Functions are connect with each other in various ways, among which one is the offering of a list of values, called arguments, by a function that calls another function. These arguments are listed between parentheses. When main has only () with nothing in them, this means that it does not expect any arguments.

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