No. However, compilers can be included into an operating system package, like with gcc is almost always included in many GNU/Linux and perhaps some BSD distributions.
Actually it's the other way around. You require different compilers for different operating systems. The reason for this is that an operating system is basically an intermediate step for a person to be able to interact with the hardware on their system. Each OS has a different way to do this, and so compilers must be different for each one, even for the same language.
How is a memory-resident part of an operating system different from a nonresident part of an operating system?
The operating system has different layers. The different layers includes the shell, the utilities, the compilers, device drivers and the applications.
No. It is easier to alter shell when it is not part of the operating system. Answer: its easier but the real answer is shell is not part of Operating system as it is command prompt use to operate operating system and its part of disk operating system
No. It is easier to alter shell when it is not part of the operating system. Answer: its easier but the real answer is shell is not part of Operating system as it is command prompt use to operate operating system and its part of disk operating system
C compilers are available on quite a lot of OS's, like Unices, Windows, DOS, BS2000...
operating system
User Interface
Yes, Windows Accessories was always Windows operating system part.
No: Linux is a general purpose operating system, and it has a windows system as well. Yes: Linux looks like a window operating system to the uninitiated.
Yes. There are C compilers for MS-DOS and for Xenix. Santa Cruz Operation OpenServer can compile programs to run on Xenix. See http://williambader.com/museum/dell/xenixhistory.html
yes