Programming Languages
Basic of Programming Language
Marks 1Marks 2
Function and Recursion
Marks 1Marks 2
Pointer and Structure in C
Marks 1Marks 2Marks 5
1
GATE CSE 2000
MCQ (Single Correct Answer)
+1
-0.3
The most appropriate matching for the following pairs

X: m=malloc(5); m= NULL;
Y: free(n); n->value = 5;
Z: char *p; *p='a';

1: using dangling
2: using uninitialized pointers
3. lost memory
is:
A
X – 1 Y – 3 Z – 2
B
X – 2 Y – 1 Z – 3
C
X – 3 Y – 2 Z – 1
D
X – 3 Y – 1 Z – 2
2
GATE CSE 2000
MCQ (Single Correct Answer)
+1
-0.3
Consider the following C declaration
struct {
      short s[5];
      union {
      float y;
      long z;
      } u;
}t;
Assume that objects of the type short, float and long occupy 2 bytes, 4 bytes and 8 bytes, respectively. The memory requirement for variable t, ignoring alignment considerations, is
A
22 bytes
B
14 bytes
C
18 bytes
D
10 bytes
3
GATE CSE 2000
MCQ (Single Correct Answer)
+1
-0.3
The following C declarations
struct node{
  int i:
  float j;
};
struct node *s[10];
define s to be
A
An array, each element of which is a pointer to a structure of type node
B
A structure of 2 fields, each field being a pointer to an array of 10 elements
C
A structure of 3 fields: an integer, a float, and an array of 10 elements
D
An array, each element of which is a structure of type node
GATE CSE Subjects
Theory of Computation
Operating Systems
Algorithms
Digital Logic
Database Management System
Data Structures
Computer Networks
Software Engineering
Compiler Design
Web Technologies
General Aptitude
Discrete Mathematics
Programming Languages
Computer Organization