1 / 37

CNS 1120 Exam 1 Review

Introduction to Programming. CNS 1120 Exam 1 Review. Programming Language Elements. Syntax = the rules to follow Semantics = the meaning of symbols Keywords = 340, we will use about 50 Operators = old friends, and a few new ones Procedures, functions and sub-routines Data types

Download Presentation

CNS 1120 Exam 1 Review

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. Introduction to Programming CNS 1120 Exam 1 Review

  2. Programming Language Elements • Syntax = the rules to follow • Semantics = the meaning of symbols • Keywords = 340, we will use about 50 • Operators = old friends, and a few new ones • Procedures, functions and sub-routines • Data types • Data structures

  3. Language Translation • Computers can only run Machine Language CodeAll other code must be translated into machine language • Two processes are possible • Interpreted • Compiled

  4. No Magic Numbers • Only 0, 1, -1, “” allowed as literal constants • Named constant easier to understand • Constant reduces a the chance for typos • Makes a change throughout the program easy and correctTAX_RATE goes from 0.081 to 0.086 • Const SHIPPLING_PER_TON = .081

  5. Data types defined in VB • String • Variable length • Fixed length • Numbers • Integer, Long, Single, Double, Currency • Others - Variant • User defined

  6. Number data types • Whole numbers 37 -842 • Integer - small • Long - big • Fractional numbers 37.7223 -842.01 • Single - Big • Double - Bigger • Currency Special Biggest • Date Special

  7. Data type String • Variable length - 2 Billion max • Dim FirstName as String • FirstName = “Don” FirstName= “Victoria” • Size changes automatically • Size 10 bytes + 1 byte per letter • Fixed length - 65,400 max • Dim ZipCode as String * 5 • ZipCode = “48058”

  8. Data Type Integer • Whole number 89, -37, -32768, 32840 • Memory set aside 2 Bytes • Maximum Size +-32K (-32767 to +32768) • Dim Age as Integer • Age = 100 • Fractional values are dropped

  9. Data Type Long (Integer) • Whole number 89, -37, -32768, 32840 • Memory Set aside 4Bytes • Maximum Size very big • -2,147,843,648 to 2,147,843,648 • Dim BankBallance as Long ‘4 bytes • BankBallance = 1000895 ‘ No comma’s

  10. Data TypeSingle • Fractional number 89.6 -37.0 .00006 • Maximum - Big number (-3.4E-45 to 3.4E38) • Memory Set aside 4 Bytes • 7 Significant Digits • 1.7894288 .00017894288 17894288 • Dim Wage as Single • Wage = 5.90

  11. Data TypeDouble • Fractional number 89.6 -37.0 .00006 • 1.7894288 .00017894288 17894288 • Maximum - Very big (-1.9E324 to 4.9E308) • Memory Set aside 8 Bytes • 15 Significant Digits • -.0009787658654388955 9875.86445679987 • Math takes six time

  12. Data Type Currency • Fractional number with 4 decimal places • Maximum Very big (15.4 digits) • Memory Set aside 8 Bytes • Dim HouseLoan as Currency • HouseLoan = 111211121112765.9999 • Math takes six times

  13. Variable Scope • Depends on where and how declared • Scope How declared • Local - Dim, Const, Static, ReDim • Module - Dim, Private • Global - Global, Public • Right mouse click will show properties of variable

  14. Variable Scope & Life • Procedure Declaration • Scope - local to procedure • Life - length of procedure • Form Declaration • Scope - global to all procedures in form • Life - of application • Global Declaration • Scope - global to application

  15. Static Vs Dim • Initializes Variable the first time only, then the value is maintained for the remainder of the life of the program. Reuse of the variable (by entering the procedure), does not reinitialize the variable. Scope is unchanged. Static Joe As Integer Dim Joe As Integer

  16. Variable (or Const) Scope • What Variable can be accessed (read or changed) by a different domain • Local - Dim within a Control_Event( ) • can only be accessed it’s domain • Module -Dim in Form General Declarations • accessed by all the form’s controls domain-bad • Global -Global in Form Declaration • anyone can access - generally bad

  17. Variable Scope • Local variables can not have the same name in the same procedure • Local variables can have the same name in different procedures • Local variables can have same name as Modules/Globals • Computer looks local, then module, global • All Forms are Global

  18. Variable’s Life • Local - while code runs • Except Static variables • Module - while the form is in memory • Global - while the Program runs • Allows re-use of memory

  19. Public Vs Private code • Public changes all variables to Global • Allows the code to be used by others • Violates basic OOP concepts - very unusual

  20. String Concatenation & • Adds a string to the end of another string • String1 = “The big bad” • String2 = “wolf.” • String3 = String1 & String2 • String3 now contains The big badwolf. • String4 = String3

  21. Assignment operator = • Target = Source ‘ required direction • 3 = A if A = 7 and B = 2 then after A = B what is contained in both A and B ??? • Target must be a variable • Right side of equation is completely evaluated, then transferred over = • Auto-conversion will occur unless forced by programmer – But only in this language

  22. Functions have a return value • Dim str As String • str = InputBox( “First Name” ) • Physically - the whole InputBox term is replaced by the value that is returned so it becomes • str = “Don” • then the assignment is made

  23. Conversion String to Number Functions Val ( ) • Changes from string to a number data type • Val(String) changes a string a number. Combines over blanks, tabs, LF up to the First non-number character (letter$, -) • String with no number first gets a value = 0 • Number outside acceptable value get Err 6 • See also CInt(), CLng(), CSng(), CDbl()

  24. Binary Arithmetic Operators • Addition + 9 = 7 + 2 • Subtraction - 5 = 7 - 2 • Multiplication * 14 = 7 * 2 • Division / 3.5 = 7 / 2 • Exponentiation ^ 49 = 7 ^ 2 • Integer Division \ 3 = 7 \ 2 • Modulo MOD 1 = 7 MOD 2

  25. Integer Divisions & Modulus 6.33 6 38 / 6 6/ 38.00 38 \ 6 6/ 38 -36-36 20 remainder 2 -18 2 = 38 MOD 6 20 ? = 29 MOD 5 - 18 ? = 16 MOD 12 = 84 MOD 20

  26. Unary Operators • Positive + x = + 7 • Negative - x = -13 • Unary & Binary operators • x = 7 + -2 • x = - (-7 + 13) + (-3 - -4)

  27. Scientific or Exponential Notation • 3.08E+12 = 3080000000000.00 • 3.08E-6 = 0.00000308 • -4.9E+1 = -49. • ? = 6.8E-3 • ? = 7.99998E+3 • ? = 9.999999E-13 • ? = 1.8E+308

  28. Parenthesis ( ) Exponential ^ Unary operators + - Mult. & Div. * / Integer Division \ Modulus MOD Add & Sub + - Concatenation & Comparison = Comparison < > Comparison < Comparison > Comparison <= Comparison >= Assignment = Operator Precedence Rule

  29. Unicode String Like Object compare Is Logical Not Logical And Logical Or Logical Xor Logical Eqv Logical Imp Assignment = Operator Precedence Rule

  30. Comment’s • Used to document code • Block comments tell what several lines will do • Comment to tell that line itself Note: Page 161 • REM as the first word in a line of code, causes the computer to ignore the whole line of code • REM the abbreviated symbol ‘ can be used anywhere with in a line - rest of line ignored

  31. String Operators • &(or + )Concatenation operator • Dim a As String • Dim B As String • a = “Tom” • B = “Jones” • lblX.caption = a & B ‘TomJones • lblX.caption= a & “ “ & “Jones” ‘ Tom Jones

  32. String Comparisons • ( “Tom Brown” = “Tom brown” ) • Strings are compared letter by letter until • A difference between the ANSI value of the two characters in the same position is found F • One string ends and the other continues (diff) F • Both strings end with no differences - True • 32 = Abs(UCase -LCase) • 1, 0, -1 returned by StrComp(Str1, Str2,rule)

  33. String functions • Len(Str) ‘Returns number of characters • Val (Str) ‘Ret. Numbers (first) in a string • CDbl(str) ‘ same Val but for international • If the function name ends in $, the the function returns a string • Str$ (Num ) ‘Number to string characters

  34. And truth table And T F T T F F F F Test 1 Test2

  35. Or truth table Or T F T T T F T F Test 1 Test 2

  36. Xor truth table Xor T F T F T F T F Test 1 Test 2

  37. Not unary truth table Not T F F T Test 1

More Related