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Mercredi (Saison 1)+99 241. The Boys (Saison 3)+168 242. Demon Slayer (Saison 1)+148 243. What If. ? (Saison 2)+122 244. L'Intrigante et le Roi (Saison 1)+120 245. Only Murders in the Building (Saison 1)+349 Dernière mise à jour des classements de streaming : 09:16:26, 09/03/2024 The Boys est 241 au classement quotidien du streaming JustWatch aujourd'hui.The memorandum with a reference to this is from 1974. Martin Richards has these documents. I have a bad photocopy of the manual and a copy of the memorandum. I believe the original had no punctuation. The BCPL and the B code appeared almost at the same time. I always thought the B code cited by therefromhere came first, but Martin Richards seemed to think the BCPL code was first. In either case, "Hello Word!" predates K&R, and its first documented use in code appears to have been written by Brian Kernighan at Bell Labs. Share Improve this answer Follow answered Jan 20, 2014 at 3:29 community wiki
Chuck Herbert Add a comment | 1 First time I came across it in print was (I think) the first edition of K&R, so tha would have been circa 1982, but I'd been writing my own "Hello world" programs long before that, as had everyone else. Share Improve this answer Follow answered Mar 2, 2009 at 12:59 anonanon Add a comment | 1 From Wikipedia 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 seminal 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: http://en. wikipedia.