Hoo boy, that'd mean you were were writing C about 6 years after its creation, and a whopping 11 years before its standardization. |
That's actually true. I forget the hardware (it was a brand new installation at the local university - the actual machine was behind a glass wall - visitors like me couldn't touch it, just the terminals), and the K & R book had not yet been published (but released that year).
I was 15, and through my father's friends managed to get "invited" to learn on a "real computer system", as opposed to the 8 bit TRS-80, Apple 2 and other 6502 based machines I had at the house. One of the large donors who paid for the new machine introduced me to the brand new professor of the CS department, and I managed to work that door open into a daily visitation to study and learn C and UNIX. Since even the department was new I had only 2 other students competing for 6 terminals setup for students. Nearly free reign given the time.
Even at that point (post Apple 2 release), it was rare for families to have a computer at home, so a "kid" that knew assembler (6502 & Z80, modest CPU's to be sure), and, obviously, BASIC - was a kind of fascination to professors. You might find 1 in 2,000 people had ever seen a computer, other than in a store or a movie.
A different era, virtually a different world.