1 / 61

C# Introduction

Learn the basics of C# programming using Visual Studio 2013 with a step-by-step demonstration. Understand event-driven programming, controls, properties, and procedures. Discover how to create GUI elements, set properties, and write event procedures. Get hands-on experience with variable declaration, input/output of numeric values, and explicit conversion.

tetreault
Télécharger la présentation

C# Introduction

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. C# Introduction ISYS 512

  2. Visual Studio 2013 Demo • Start page: New project/ Open project/Recent projects • Starting project: • File/New Project/ • C# • Windows • Windows form application • Project name/Project folder • Project windows: • Form design view/Form code view • Solution Explorer • View/Solution Explorer • ToolBox • Property Window • Properties and Events • Server Explorer • Project/Add New Item • Property window example

  3. Introduction to C# • Event-driven programming • The interface for a C# program consists of one or more forms, containing one or more controls (screen objects). • Form and controls have events that can respond to. Typical events include clicking a mouse button, type a character on the keyboard, changing a value, etc. • Event procedure

  4. Form • Properties: • Name, FormBorderStyle, Text, BackColor, BackImage, Opacity • Events: • Load, FormClosing, FormClosed • GotFocus, LostFocus • MouseHover, Click, DoubleCLick

  5. Common Controls • TextBox • Label • Button • CheckBox • RadioButton • ListBox • ComboBox • PictureBox

  6. Text Box • Properties: • BorderStyle, CauseValidation, Enabled, Locked, Multiline, PasswordChar, ReadOnly, ScrollBar, TabIndex, Text, Visible, WordWrap, etc. • Properties can be set at the design time or at the run time using code. • To refer to a property: • ControlName.PropertyName • Ex. TextBox1.Text • Note: The Text property is a string data type and automatically inherits the properties and methods of the string data type.

  7. Typical C# Programming Tasks • Creating the GUI elements that make up the application’s user interface. • Visualize the application. • Make a list of the controls needed. • Setting the properties of the GUI elements • Writing procedures that respond to events and perform other operations.

  8. To Add an Event-Procedure • 1. Select the Properties window • 2. Click Events button • 3. Select the event and double-click it. • Note: Every control has a default event. • Form: Load event • Button control: Click event • Textbox: Text Changed event • To add the default event procedure, simply double-click the control.

  9. Demo FirstName LastName Show Full Name .Control properties .Event: Click, MouseMove, FormLoad, etc. .Event procedures FullName: textBox3.Text textBox3.Text = textBox1.Text + " " + textBox2.Text; Demo: Text alignment (TextBox3.TextAlign=HorizontalAlign.Right) TextBox3.BackColor=Color.Aqua;

  10. Demo Num1 Num2 Compute Sum .Control properties .Event: Click, MouseMove, FormLoad, etc. .Event procedures Sum: textBox3.Text = (double.Parse(textBox1.Text) + double.Parse(textBox2.Text)).ToString(); In-Class lab: Show the product of Num1 and Num2.

  11. C# Project • The execution starts from the Main method which is found in the Program.cs file. • Solution/Program.cs • Contain the startup code • Example: Application.Run(new Form1());

  12. Variable Names • A variable name identifies a variable • Always choose a meaningful name for variables • Basic naming conventions are: • the first character must be a letter (upper or lowercase) or an underscore (_) • the name cannot contain spaces • do not use C# keywords or reserved words • Variable name is case sensitive

  13. Declare a Variable • C# is a strongly typed language. This means that when a variable is defined we have to specify what type of data the variable will hold. • DataType VaraibleName; • A C# statement ends with “;”

  14. string DataType • string Variables: • Examples: string empName; string firstName, lastAddress, fullName; • String concatenation: + • Examples: fullName = firstName + lastName; MessageBox.Show(“Total is “ + 25.75);

  15. Numeric Data Types • int, double • Examples: double mydouble=12.7, rate=0.07; int Counter = 0;

  16. Inputting and Outputting Numeric Values • Input collected from the keyboard are considered combinations of characters (or string literals) even if they look like a number to you • A TextBox control reads keyboard input, such as 25.65. However, the TextBox treats it as a string, not a number. • In C#, use the following Parse methods to convert string to numeric data types • int.Parse • double.Parse • Examples: int hoursWorked = int.Parse(hoursWorkedTextBox1.Text); double temperature = double.Parse(temperatureTextBox.Text); Note: We can also use the .Net’s Convert class methods: ToDouble, ToInt, ToDecimal: Example: hoursWorked = Convert.ToDouble(textBox1.Text);

  17. Explicit Conversion between Numeric Data Types with Cast Operators • C# allows you to explicitly convert among types, which is known as type casting • You can use the cast operator which is simply a pair of parentheses with the type keyword in it int iNum1; double dNum1 = 2.5; iNum1 = (int) dNum1; Note: We can also use the .Net’s Convert class methods

  18. Implicit conversion and explicit conversion int iNum1 = 5, iNum2 = 10; double dNum1 = 2.5, dNum2 = 7.0; dNum1 = iNum1 + iNum2; /*C# implicitly convert integer to double*/ iNum1 = (int) dNum1 * 2; /*from doulbe to integer requires cast operator*/

  19. Performing Calculations • Basic calculations such as arithmetic calculation can be performed by math operators Other calculations: Use Math class’s methods.

  20. Example int dividend, divisor, quotient, remainder; dividend = int.Parse(textBox1.Text); divisor = int.Parse(textBox2.Text); quotient = dividend / divisor; remainder = dividend % divisor; textBox3.Text = quotient.ToString(); textBox4.Text = remainder.ToString(); Note: The result of an integer divided by an integer is integer. For example, 7/2 is 3, not 3.5.

  21. Lab Exercise • Enter length measured in inches in a textbox; then show the equivalent length measured in feet and inches. • For example, 27 inches is equivalent to 2 feet and 3 inches.

  22. FV = PV * (1 +Rate) Year double pv, rate, years, fv; pv = double.Parse(textBox1.Text); rate = double.Parse(textBox2.Text); years = double.Parse(textBox3.Text); fv = pv*Math.Pow(1 + rate, years); textBox4.Text = fv.ToString();

  23. Formatting Numbers with the ToString Method • The ToString method can optionally format a number to appear in a specific way • The following table lists the “format strings” and how they work with sample outputs

  24. Working with DateTime Data • Declare DateTime variable: • Example: DateTime mydate; • Convert date entered in a textbox to DateTime data: • Use Convert: • mydate = Convert.ToDateTime(textBox1.Text); • Use DateTime class Parse method: • mydate = DateTime.Parse(textBox1.Text); • DateTime variable’s properties and methods: • MinValue, MaxValue

  25. DateTime Example DateTime myDate; myDate = DateTime.Parse(textBox1.Text); MessageBox.Show(myDate.ToLongDateString()); MessageBox.Show(DateTime.MinValue.ToShortDateString()); MessageBox.Show(DateTime.MaxValue.ToShortDateString());

  26. How to calculate the number of days between two dates? • TimeSpan class: TimeSpan represents a length of time. Define a TimeSpan variable: TimeSpan ts; • We may use a TimeSpan class variable to represent the length between two dates: ts = laterDate-earlierDate;

  27. Code Example DateTime earlierDate, laterDate; double daysBetween; TimeSpan ts; earlierDate = DateTime.Parse(textBox1.Text); laterDate = DateTime.Parse(textBox2.Text); ts = laterDate-earlierDate; daysBetween = ts.Days; MessageBox.Show("There are " + daysBetween.ToString() + " days between " + earlierDate.ToShortDateString() + " and " + laterDate.ToShortDateString()); Note: Pay attention to how we create the output string.

  28. Comments • Line comment: // // my comment • Block comment: /* …… */ /* comment 1 Comment 2 … Comment n */

  29. Throwing an Exception • In the following example, the user may entered invalid data (e.g. null) to the milesText control. In this case, an exception happens (which is commonly said to “throw an exception”). • The program then jumps to the catch block. • You can use the following to display an exception’s default error message: catch (Exception ex) { MessageBox.Show(ex.Message); } try { double miles; double gallons; double mpg; miles = double.Parse(milesTextBox.Text); gallons = double.Parse(gallonsTextBox.Text); mpg = miles / gallons; mpgLabel.Text = mpg.ToString(); } catch { MessageBox.Show("Invalid data was entered."): }

  30. Decision Structure • The flowchart is a single-alternative decision structure • It provides only one alternative path of execution • In C#, you can use the if statement to write such structures. A generic format is: if (expression) { Statements; Statements; etc.; } • The expression is a Boolean expression that can be evaluated as either true or false Cold outside True Wear a coat False

  31. Relational Operators • A relational operatordetermines whether a specific relationship exists between two values

  32. The if-else statement • An if-else statement will execute one block of statement if its Boolean expression is true or another block if its Boolean expression is false • It has two parts: an if clause and an else clause • In C#, a generic format looks: if (expression) { statements; } else { statements; }

  33. The if-else-if Statement • You can also create a decision structure that evaluates multiple conditions to make the final decision using the if-else-if statement • In C#, the generic format is: if (expression) { } else if (expression) { } else if (expression) { } … else { } int grade = double.Parse(textBox1.Text); if (grade >=90) { MessageBox.Show("A"); } else if (grade >=80) { MessageBox.Show("B"); } else if (grade >=70) { MessageBox.Show("C"); } else if (grade >=60) { MessageBox.Show("D"); } else { MessageBox.Show("F"); }

  34. Logical Operators • The logical AND operator (&&) and the logical OR operator (||) allow you to connect multiple Boolean expressions to create a compound expression • The logical NOT operator (!) reverses the truth of a Boolean expression

  35. Sample Decision Structures with Logical Operators • The && operator if (temperature < 20 && minutes > 12) { MessageBox.Show(“The temperature is in the danger zone.”); } • The || operator if (temperature < 20 || temperature > 100) { MessageBox.Show(“The temperature is in the danger zone.”); } • The ! Operator if (!(temperature > 100)) { MessageBox.Show(“The is below the maximum temperature.”); }

  36. Boolean (bool) Variables and Flags • You can store the values true or false in bool variables, which are commonly used as flags • A flag is a variable that signals when some condition exists in the program • False – indicates the condition does not exist • True – indicates the condition exists Boolean good; // bool good; if (mydate.Year == 2011) { good = true; } else { good = false; } MessageBox.Show(good.ToString());

  37. Sample switch Statement switch (month) { case 1: MessageBox.Show(“January”); break; case 2: MessageBox.Show(“February”); break; case 3: MessageBox.Show(“March”); break; default: MessageBox.Show(“Error: Invalid month”); break; } month Display “January” Display “February” Display “March” Display “Error: Invalid month”

  38. Structure of a while Loop • In C#, the generic format of a while loop is: while (BooleanExpression) { Statements; } • Example: • while (count < 5) • { • counter = count + 1; • // counter ++; • } • MessageBox.Show(counter.ToString());

  39. The for Loop • The for loop is specially designed for situations requiring a counter variable to control the number of times that a loop iterates • You must specify three actions: • Initialization: a one-time expression that defines the initial value of the counter • Test: A Boolean expression to be tested. If true, the loop iterates. • Update: increase or decrease the value of the counter • A generic form is: for (initializationExpress; testExpression; updateExpression) { } • The for loop is a pretest loop

  40. Sample Code int count; for (count = 1; count <= 5; count++) { MessageBox.Show(“Hello”); } • The initialization expression assign 1 to the count variable • The expression count <=5 is tested. If true, continue to display the message. • The update expression add 1 to the count variable • Start the loop over // declare count variable in initialization expression for (int count = 1; count <= 5; count++) { MessageBox.Show(“Hello”); }

  41. Other Forms of Update Expression • In the update expression, the counter variable is typically incremented by 1. But, this is not a requirement. //increment by 10 for (int count = 0; count <=100; count += 10) { MessageBox.Show(count.ToString());} • You can decrement the counter variable to make it count backward //counting backward for (int count = 10; count >=0; count--) { MessageBox.Show(count.ToString());}

  42. The do-while Loop • The do-while loop is a posttest loop, which means it performs an iteration before testing its Boolean expression. • In the flowchart, one or more statements are executed before a Boolean expression is tested • A generic format is: do { statement(s); } while (BooleanExpression); Statement(s) Boolean Expression True False

  43. Programming Interface Controls with C#

  44. Working with Form • To close a form: • this.Close(); • To choose the startup form:Change the code in Program.cs • Example, to start from form2 instead of form1, use this code: • Application.Run(new Form2());

  45. Form Closing Event private void Form2_FormClosing(object sender, FormClosingEventArgs e) { if (MessageBox.Show("Are you sure?", "Warning", MessageBoxButtons.YesNo) == DialogResult.Yes) { e.Cancel = false; } else { e.Cancel = true; } }

  46. Modeless form: Other forms can receive input focus while this form remains active. • FormName.Show() • Modal form: No other form can receive focus while this form remains active. • FormName.ShowDialog()

  47. Multiple Forms Two forms: Form1, Form2 To Open Form2 from Form1: Standard but troublesome way to open a form: Must create an instance of the form class by using the keyword New to access the form. Form2 f2 = new Form2 (); Open Form2 as a Modeless form: f2.Show (); Open Form2 as a Modal form: f2.ShowDialog(); Demo: Problem with the Show method .

  48. Interactive Input using VB’s InputBox Statement Add a reference to Microsoft Visual Baisc: 1. From the Solution Explorer, right-click the References node, then click Add Reference 2. Click Assemblies/Framework and select Microsoft Visual Baisc 3. Add this code to the form: using Microsoft.VisualBasic; Example of using InputBox: int myint; myint= int.Parse(Interaction.InputBox("enter a number:")); MessageBox.Show(myint.ToString());

  49. Accumulator Find the sum of all even numbers between 1 and N. Method 1: int N, Sum, Counter = 1; N = int.Parse(Interaction.InputBox("enter an integer:")); Sum = 0; while (Counter <= N) { if (Counter % 2 ==0) Sum += Counter; ++Counter; } MessageBox.Show(Sum.ToString());

  50. TextBox Validating EventExample: Testing for digits only There is no equivalent IsNumeric function in C#. This example uses the Double.Parse method trying to convert the data entered in the box to double. If fail then it is not numeric. private void textBox1_Validating(object sender, CancelEventArgs e) { try { Double.Parse(textBox1.Text); e.Cancel = false; } catch { e.Cancel = true; MessageBox.Show("Enter digits only"); } }

More Related