C-- (pronounced "see minus minus") is a C-like programming language. Its creators, functional programming researchers Simon Peyton Jones and Norman Ramsey, designed it to be generated mainly by compilers for very high-level languages rather than written by human programmers. Unlike many other intermediate languages, its representation is plain ASCII text, not bytecode or another binary format.
C-- is a "portable assembly language", designed to ease the task of implementing a compiler which produces high quality machine code. This is done by having the compiler generate C-- code, delegating the harder work of low-level code generation and optimisation to a C-- compiler.
Work on C-- began in the late 1990s. Since writing a custom code generator is a challenge in itself, and the compiler back ends available to researchers at that time were complex and poorly documented, several projects had written compilers which generated C code (for instance, the original Modula-3 compiler). However, C is a poor choice for functional languages: it does not support tail recursion, accurate garbage collection or efficient exception handling. C-- is a simpler, tightly-defined alternative to C which does support all of these things. Its most innovative feature is a run-time interface which allows writing of portable garbage collectors, exception handling systems and other run-time features which work with any C-- compiler.
C̈, c̈ in lower case, also called C with diaeresis, is a letter in the Chechen language. It represents the voiceless postalveolar affricate consonant, the same as the č in Serbo-Croatian and ç in Turkish and Albanian.
The original letter representing the voiceless postalveolar affricate consonant in Chechen was ç, but was changed to c̈ just as ş was changed to s̈.
The voiceless palatal affricate is a type of consonantal sound, used in some spoken languages. The symbol in the International Phonetic Alphabet that represents this sound is ⟨c͡ç⟩. The voiceless palatal affricate occurs in such languages as Hungarian and Skolt Sami, among others. The consonant is quite rare; it is mostly absent from Europe (with the Uralic languages and Albanian being exceptions). It usually occurs with its voiced counterpart, the voiced palatal affricate.
There is also a voiceless post-palatal affricate (also called pre-velar, fronted velar etc.) in some languages.
Features of the voiceless palatal affricate:
You simply defy, I cannot even look to the sky,
we try it single filed, take on me, and it's my denial,
I cannot ever find, something safe, not done on the fly,
I cannot live this way, floor and me will kick the P.A
You wanna play with me
I'm really gonna rock your world
You want to comfort me
I'm gonna rock your world
You say everything is fine, I cannot compete with the skies,
my sing has crossed the line, come in me,
I fly through the sky, I can not ever find,
you and me will make all the lines, oh, if they could see the plague,
no one would want to be me
You wanna play with me
I'm really gonna rock your world
You wanna comfort me
I'm gonna rock your world
So I fly
Take me
I cannot fly
Most people hate me
To fly away from this pain
Please take away