HELLO WORLD PROGRAM

A '"hello world" program' is a computer program that prints out "Hello, World!" on a display device. It is used in many introductory tutorials for teaching a programming language. Such a program is typically one of the simplest programs possible in a computer language. Some are surprisingly complex, especially in some graphical user interface (GUI) contexts, but most are very simple, especially those which rely heavily on a particular command line interpreter ("shell") to perform the actual output. In many embedded systems, the text may be sent to a one or two-line liquid crystal display (LCD), or some other appropriate signal, such as an LED being turned on, may substitute for the message.
A GUI Hello World program, written in Perl, using GTK+2, edited with Vim.

A "hello world" program can be a useful sanity test to make sure that a language's compiler, development environment, and run-time environment are correctly installed. Configuring a complete programming toolchain from scratch to the point where even trivial programs can be compiled and run can involve substantial amounts of work. For this reason, a simple program is used first when testing a new tool chain.
While small test programs existed since the development of programmable computers, the tradition of using the phrase "Hello world!" as a test message was influenced by an example program in the book ''The C Programming Language''. The example program from that book prints "hello, world" (without capital letters or exclamation mark), and was inherited from a 1974 Bell Laboratories internal memorandum by Brian Kernighan, ''Programming in C: A Tutorial'', which contains the first known version:

main() {
printf("hello, world");
}

The first known instance of the usage of the words "hello" and "world" together in computer literature occurred earlier, in Kernighan's 1972 ''Tutorial Introduction to the Language B'', with the following code:

main( ) {
extrn a, b, c;
putchar(a); putchar(b); putchar(c); putchar('!
★ n');
}
a 'hell';
b 'o, w';
c 'orld';

However, there are several ways to which someone could code the "Hello world" program in some languages, for example in the Java language;

public class HelloWorld
{
public static void main( String[] args )
{
System.out.println( "Hello world" );
}
}

"Hello world" in PHP code:

echo "Hello world";
?>

"Hello world" in Pascal code:

program New;
begin
Writeln('Hello world!');
end.

"Hello world" in Perl code:

#!/usr/bin/perl
print "Hello world!";

A light-programmable biofilm displaying the Hello World message

There are many variations on the punctuation and casing of the phrase, and the examples on this page print out several of these variations. Variations include the presence or absence of the comma and exclamation mark, and the capitalization of the 'H', both the 'H' and the 'W', or neither. Some languages are forced to implement different forms, such as "HELLO WORLD!," on systems that only support capital letters, while many "hello world" programs in esoteric languages print out a slightly modified string. For example, one Malbolge program prints "HEllO WORld", this having been determined to be "good enough". "Hello world" programs also often print a newline after their message, as shown in the examples for B and Java.

Contents
See also
External links

See also



Trabb Pardo-Knuth algorithm

Just another Perl hacker

List of basic computer science topics

★ At Wikibooks:









External links



The Hello World Collection with 300+ programs, including "Hello World" in 50+ human languages

ACM "Hello World" project

"HelloWorld online on Web, and steps beyond HelloWorld"

★ http://www.99-bottles-of-beer.net 99 bottles ... over 1000 programming languages used ...

''Programming in C: A Tutorial'' by Brian Kernighan — internal Bell Labs memo, containing the above C program

★ Humor:


from the GNU Humor Collection

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psst.. try this: add to faves