C vs Java Complete Comparison

  Pi Ke        2011-10-06 12:46:39       34,992        7    

Similarities:

Java and C have same syntax operators.

Difference—thinking

Two paradigms:

Java: Object oriented language

C: Structured language

Differences: --Syntax

No preprocessor

Java does not include a preprocessor and does not define any analogs of the #define, #include, and #ifdef directives. Constant definitions are replaced with static final fields in Java. (See the java.lang.Math.PI field for an example.) Macro definitions are not available in Java, but advanced compiler technology and inlining has made them less useful. Java does not require an #include directive because Java has no header files. Java class files contain both the class API and the class implementation, and the compiler reads API information from class files as necessary. Java lacks any form of conditional compilation, but its cross-platform portability means that this feature is very rarely needed.

No global variables

Java defines a very clean namespace. Packages contain classes, classes contain fields and methods, and methods contain local variables. But there are no global variables in Java, and, thus, there is no possibility of namespace collisions among those variables.

Well-defined primitive type sizes

All the primitive types in Java have well-defined sizes. In C, the size of short, int, and long types is platform-dependent, which hampers portability.

No pointers

Java classes and arrays are reference types, and references to objects and arrays are akin to pointers in C. Unlike C pointers, however, references in Java are entirely opaque. There is no way to convert a reference to a primitive type, and a reference cannot be incremented or decremented. There is no address-of operator like &, dereference operator like * or >, orsizeof operator. Pointers are a notorious source of bugs. Eliminating them simplifies the language and makes Java programs more robust and secure.

Garbage collection

The Java Virtual Machine performs garbage collection so that Java programmers do not have to explicitly manage the memory used by all objects and arrays. This feature eliminates another entire category of common bugs and all but eliminates memory leaks from Java programs.

No goto statement

Java doesn't support a goto statement. Use of goto except in certain well-defined circumstances is regarded as poor programming practice. Java adds exception handling and labeledbreak and continue statements to the flow-control statements offered by C. These are a good substitute for goto.

Variable declarations anywhere

C requires local variable declarations to be made at the beginning of a method or block, while Java allows them anywhere in a method or block. Many programmers prefer to keep all their variable declarations grouped together at the top of a method, however.

Forward references

The Java compiler is smarter than the C compiler, in that it allows methods to be invoked before they are defined. This eliminates the need to declare functions in a header file before defining them in a program file, as is done in C.

Method overloading

Java programs can define multiple methods with the same name, as long as the methods have different parameter lists.

No struct and union types

Java doesn't support C struct and union types. A Java class can be thought of as an enhanced struct, however.

No enumerated types

Java doesn't support the enum keyword used in C to define types that consist of fixed sets of named values. This is surprising for a strongly typed language like Java, but there are ways to simulate this feature with object constants.

No bitfields

Java doesn't support the (infrequently used) ability of C to specify the number of individual bits occupied by fields of a struct.

No typedef

Java doesn't support the typedef keyword used in C to define aliases for type names. Java's lack of pointers makes its type-naming scheme simpler and more consistent than C's, however, so many of the common uses of typedef are not really necessary in Java.

No method pointers

C allows you to store the address of a function in a variable and pass this function pointer to other functions. You cannot do this with Java methods, but you can often achieve similar results by passing an object that implements a particular interface. Also, a Java method can be represented and invoked through a java.lang.reflect.Method object.

No variable-length argument lists

Java doesn't allow you to define methods such as C's printf() that take a variable number of arguments. Method overloading allows you to simulate C varargs functions for simple cases, but there's no general replacement for this feature.

Difference-Run

Java: JVM, require more memory but cross-platform

C: Machine dependent, requires fewer memory than Java.

C  JAVA  COMPARISON  DIFFERENCE  SIMILARITIE 

       

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  7 COMMENTS


foo [Reply]@ 2012-03-07 06:40:14
> No variable-length argument lists. Yes it is possible, built-in Java... What about that: void printArgs(String... args) { for (String arg: args) System.out.println("-> " + arg); } > No enumerated types Really ? http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/javaOO/enum.html You may search deeper before doing a so-called "Complete comparison"
chris [Reply]@ 2013-03-22 07:59:59
i think the author was just in java 1.4 not java 5.
bar [Reply]@ 2012-03-07 07:00:53
A comparison with C++ would probably have been more pertinent...
samuellb [Reply]@ 2012-03-07 07:28:23
Here are some comments/opinions on your article: #1. Modern C programs often have some OO patterns in them. E.g. implementation hiding and prefixing functions with their "namespace", like "gtk_button_new" for creating a Button in GTK. #2. C99 does not require you to put variable declarations first in a function. It's only the 1989/1990 version of C that requires this. #3. You also don't have to put forward declarations in a header file in C. Static functions (=private in Java) should be really be put at the top in the .c file, because they are not made visible to other object (.o) files anyway. I'd say header files are more like a place where you put "public" definitions that are supposed to be visible in other source files.
Julio [Reply]@ 2012-03-08 12:50:24
1. I think the main differences between C and Java are execution differences, the JVM, portability, the language itself is not as relevant. 2. Java has enums and variable argument lists since Java 5. When was this comparison done? (Oh, and having a dot '.' in the middle of an email addres is valid; so, bad validation)
james [Reply]@ 2012-04-09 17:13:06
This article does not do justice to the word "complete."
mobileapp [Reply]@ 2013-02-22 23:39:44
great


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