Bjarne Stroustrup (b.1950, Denmark) both designed and developed "C with Classes" in 1979. It was renamed "C++" in 1983 and the first commercial release was in 1985. He was chiefly responsible for the first implementation, but later concentrated on the language design and specification and sat on the C++ standards committee processing extension proposals. He also wrote the seminal book "The C++ Programming Language" (a must-have for any serious C++ programmer), which is now in its third edition. He is currently a Professor and holder of the College of Engineering Chair in Computer Science at Texas A&M University.
No, not directly. But maybe yes indirectly The code behind languages of a web page in asp.net are either VB.NET or C#. No, you cannot develop / write codes in C++ in these code-behind You still can call out to some components written in C++ from these code-behind pages via C# or VB.NET codes
C: there are no methods in C. C++: no.
c is procedure oriented and c++ is object oriented & much newer.
If a + b + c + d + 80 + 90 = 100, then a + b + c + d = -70.
C++ is related to C, the language from which it is derived.
No, not directly. But maybe yes indirectly The code behind languages of a web page in asp.net are either VB.NET or C#. No, you cannot develop / write codes in C++ in these code-behind You still can call out to some components written in C++ from these code-behind pages via C# or VB.NET codes
b+b+b+c+c+c+c =3b+4c
c + c + 2c + c + c = 6c
b + b + b + c + c + c + c = 3b + 4c
4c
c + c + c + c + c = 5 * c.
Some use PhD(c)
There are no "primary and secondary keys" in c and c plus plus.
3c
There is no such thing as 'unix C++'.
They do exist in C and C++.
C plus is between 3 and 3.2. C = 75% 0% < Plus < 5% 75%+0% < C Plus < 75%+5% 75 < C Plus < 80% 75%*4 < C Plus < 80% * 4 (3/4)*4 < C Plus < (4/5) * 4 3 < C Plus < 16/5 3 < C Plus < 3.2