1 / 38

Week 2 Introduction to Computer Programming/ C Programming Language

Week 2 Introduction to Computer Programming/ C Programming Language. Outline. Pseudo code & flowchart Sample programming question Sample C program Identifiers and reserved words Program comments Pre-processor directives Data types and type declarations Operators

klight
Télécharger la présentation

Week 2 Introduction to Computer Programming/ C Programming Language

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Week 2Introduction to Computer Programming/C Programming Language EKT120: Computer Programming

  2. Outline • Pseudo code & flowchart • Sample programming question • Sample C program • Identifiers and reserved words • Program comments • Pre-processor directives • Data types and type declarations • Operators • Formatted input and output • Program debugging EKT120: Computer Programming

  3. Sample Programming Question • Write a program that calculates area of triangle. Your program should read the base length and the height length from user. Given the formula to calculate the area of triangle: 0.5 x (base) x (height). • Steps: • Analyze the problem • Use algorithm • Convert to actual codes EKT120: Computer Programming

  4. Recall..Pseudo code and Flowchart Try develop the pseudo code and flowchart for the problem given in the previous slide. EKT120: Computer Programming

  5. Sample C Program /*Program name : program1.c Programmer : Yasmin This program calculates the area of triangle*/ #include <stdio.h> int main(void)‏ { double dBase, dHeight, dArea; printf(“Enter base length : “); scanf(“%f”, &dBase); printf(“Enter height length : “); scanf(“%f”, &dHeight); dArea=0.5 * dBase * dHeight; printf(“\nArea of the triangle is : %5.2f\n”, dArea); return 0; } Comments Preprocessor directives The term void indicates we receive nothing from OS and return an integer to OS begin Variables declaration EKT120: Computer Programming body return 0 (int) to OS end

  6. Variables & Reserved Words • Identifiers/Variables • labels for program elements • case sensitive • can consist of capital letters[A..Z], small letters[a..z], digit[0..9], and underscore character _ • First character MUST be a letter or an underscore • No blanks • Reserved words cannot be variables/identifiers • Reserved words • already assigned to a pre-defined meaning • e.g.: delete, int, main, include, double, for, if, etc. EKT120: Computer Programming

  7. Variables & Reserved Words • An identifier for the data in the program • Hold the data in your program • Is a location (or set of locations) in memory where a value can be stored • A quantity that can change during program execution EKT120: Computer Programming

  8. Constants • A constant is a named or unnamed value, which does not change during the program execution. • Example: • const double dPi=3.141592 • Const int iDegrees=360; • Const char cQuit=‘q’; • Unnamed constant are often called literals • Eg: 3.141592 and 360 EKT120: Computer Programming

  9. Program Comments • Starts with /* and terminates with */ OR • Character // starts a line comment, if several lines, each line must begin with // • Comments cannot be nested /* /* */*/ EKT120: Computer Programming

  10. Preprocessor Directives • An instruction to pre-processor • Standard library header: <stdio.h>,<math.h> • E.g. #include <stdio.h> • for std input/output • #include <stdlib.h> • Conversion number-text vise-versa, memory allocation, random numbers • #include <string.h> • string processing EKT120: Computer Programming

  11. Data Types • Data types determine the following: • Type of data stored • Number of bytes it occupies in memory • Range of data • Operations that can be performed on the data EKT120: Computer Programming • Modifiers alter the meaning of the base type to more precisely fit a specific need • C supports the following modifiers along with data types: • short, long, signed, unsigned

  12. Data Types & Memory Allocation EKT120: Computer Programming

  13. Variables Naming Conventions • Variable names should use Hungarian notation • Start with an appropriate prefix that indicates the data type • After the prefix, the name of variable should have more or more words • The first letter of each word should be in upper case • The rest of the letter should be in lower case. • The name of variable should clearly convey the purpose of the variable EKT120: Computer Programming

  14. Naming Variables According to Standards EKT120: Computer Programming

  15. Data Types Declaration • float fIncome; float fNet_income; • double dBase, dHeight, dArea; • int iIndex =0, iCount =0; • char cCh=‘a’, cCh2; • const float fEpf = 0.1, fTax = 0.05; float income, net_income; Declare and initialize Named constant declared and initialized

  16. Types of Operators • Types of operators are: • Arithmetic operators (+ , - , * , / , %)‏ • Relational operators (> , < , == , >= , <=, !=)‏ • Logical operators (&& , ||)‏ • Compound assignment operators (+=, -=, *=, /=, %=)‏ • Binary operators: needs two operands • Unary operators: single operand • Bitwise operators: executes on bit level EKT120: Computer Programming

  17. Arithmetic Operators • Used to execute mathematical equations • The result is usually assigned to a data storage (instance/variable) using assignment operator ( = )‏ • E.g. sum = marks1 + marks2; EKT120: Computer Programming

  18. C Operation Arithmetic Operator Algebraic Expression C Expression Addition + f + 7 f + 7 Subtraction - p – c p - c Multipication * bm b * m Division / x / y x / y Remainder (Modulus)‏ % r mod s r % s Arithmetic Operators EKT120: Computer Programming

  19. Exercise on Arithmetic Operators • Given x = 20, y = 3 z = x % y = 20 % 3 = 2 (remainder)‏ EKT120: Computer Programming

  20. Relational and Logical Operators • Previously, relational operator: >, < >=, <=, == , != • Previously, logical operator: &&, || • Used to control the flow of a program • Usually used as conditions in loops and branches EKT120: Computer Programming

  21. More on relational operators • Relational operators use mathematical comparison (operation) on two data, but give logical output e.g.1 let say b = 8, if (b > 10)‏ e.g.2 while (b != 10)‏ e.g.3 if (mark == 60) print (“Pass”); Reminder: DO NOT confuse == (relational operator) with = (assignment operator)‏ EKT120: Computer Programming

  22. More on logical operators • Logical operators are manipulation of logic. For example: i. b=8, c=10, if ((b > 10) && (c<10))‏ ii. while ((b==8) || (c > 10))‏ iii. if ((kod == 1) && (salary > 2213))‏ EKT120: Computer Programming

  23. exp1 exp2 exp1 && exp2 false false false false true false true false false true true true Truth Table for &&(logical AND) Operator EKT120: Computer Programming

  24. exp1 exp2 exp1 || exp2 false false false false true true true false true true true true Truth Table for ||(logical OR) Operator EKT120: Computer Programming

  25. Compound Assignment Operators • To calculate value from expression and store it in variable, we use assignment operator (=)‏ • Compound assignment operator combines binary operator with assignment operator • E.g. val +=one; is equivalent to val = val + one; • E.g. count = count -1; is equivalent to count -=1; count--; --count; EKT120: Computer Programming

  26. Unary Operators • Obviously operating on ONE operand • Commonly used unary operators • Increment/decrement { ++ , -- } • Arithmetic Negation { - } • Logical Negation { ! } • Usually using prefix notation • Increment/decrement can be both a prefix and postfix EKT120: Computer Programming

  27. Comparison of Prefix and Postfix Increments EKT120: Computer Programming

  28. Unary Operators (Example)‏ • Increment/decrement { ++ , -- } • prefix:value incr/decr before used in expression • postfix:value incr/decr after used in expression EKT120: Computer Programming val=5; printf (“%d”, --val); Output: 4 val=5; printf (“%d”, ++val); Output: 6 val=5; printf (“%d”, val--); Output: 5 val=5; printf (“%d”, val++); Output: 5

  29. Operators Precedence ! + - (unary operators) first * / % second + - (binary operators) third < <= >= > fourth == != fifth && sixth || seventh = last Operator Precedence EKT120: Computer Programming

  30. Formatted Output with “printf” #include <stdio.h> void main (void) { int iMonth; float fExpense, fIncome; iMonth = 12; fExpense = 111.1; fIncome = 1000.0; printf (“Month=%2d, Expense=$%9.2f\n”,iMonth,fExpense); } Declaring variable (fMonth) to be integer Declaring variables (fExpense and fIncome) to be real Assignment statements store numerical values in the memory cells for the declared variables EKT120: Computer Programming ‘,’ separates string literal from variable names Correspondence between variable names and %...in string literal

  31. Formatted Output with printf-cont EKT120: Computer Programming

  32. Formatted input with scanf EKT120: Computer Programming

  33. Formatted input with scanf-cont EKT120: Computer Programming

  34. Program debugging • Syntax error • Mistakes caused by violating “grammar” of C • C compiler can easily diagnose during compilation • Run-time error • Called semantic error or smart error • Violation of rules during program execution • C compiler cannot recognize during compilation • Logic error • Most difficult error to recognize and correct • Program compiled and executed successfully but answer wrong EKT120: Computer Programming

  35. Program debugging-syntax error snapshot EKT120: Computer Programming

  36. Program debugging-run time error snapshot EKT120: Computer Programming

  37. Program debugging-logic error snapshot EKT120: Computer Programming

  38. Q & A! End Week 2 EKT120: Computer Programming

More Related