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Department of Computer and Information Science, School of Science, IUPUI

Department of Computer and Information Science, School of Science, IUPUI. CSCI 240. Review for Project 1. Dale Roberts, Lecturer Computer Science, IUPUI E-mail: droberts@cs.iupui.edu. Using Command-Line Arguments. Pass arguments to main on DOS or UNIX Define main as

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Department of Computer and Information Science, School of Science, IUPUI

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  1. Department of Computer and Information Science,School of Science, IUPUI CSCI 240 Review for Project 1 Dale Roberts, Lecturer Computer Science, IUPUI E-mail: droberts@cs.iupui.edu

  2. Using Command-Line Arguments • Pass arguments to main on DOS or UNIX • Define main as • int main( int argc, char *argv[] ) • int argc • Number of arguments passed • char *argv[] • Array of strings • Has names of arguments in order • argv[ 0 ] is first argument • Example: $ copy input output • argc: 3 • argv[ 0 ]: "copy" • argv[ 1 ]: "input" • argv[ 2 ]: "output"

  3. 1 /* Fig. 14.3: fig14_03.c Notice argc and argv[] in main argv[2] is the third argument, and is being written to. 2 Using command-line arguments */ 3 #include <stdio.h> argv[1] is the second argument, and is being read. 4 5 int main( int argc, char *argv[] ) 6 { 7 FILE *inFilePtr, *outFilePtr; 8 int c; Loop until End Of File. fgetc a character from inFilePtr and fputc it into outFilePtr. 9 10 if ( argc != 3 ) 11 printf( "Usage: copy infile outfile\n" ); 12 else 13 if ( ( inFilePtr = fopen( argv[ 1 ], "r" ) ) != NULL ) 14 15 if ( ( outFilePtr = fopen( argv[ 2 ], "w" ) ) != NULL ) 16 17 while ( ( c = fgetc( inFilePtr ) ) != EOF ) 18 fputc( c, outFilePtr ); 19 20 else 21 printf( "File \"%s\" could not be opened\n", argv[ 2 ] ); 22 23 else 24 printf( "File \"%s\" could not be opened\n", argv[ 1 ] ); 25 26 return 0; 27 } 1. Initialize variables 2. Function calls (fopen) 2.1 Specify open type (read or write) 3. Copy file

  4. Notes on Compiling Multiple-Source-File Programs • Programs with multiple source files • Function definition must be in one file (cannot be split up) • Global variables accessible to functions in same file • Global variables must be defined in every file in which they are used • Example: • If integer myGlobal is defined in one file • To use it in another file you must include the statement extern int myGlobal; • extern • States that the variable is defined in another file • Function prototypes can be used in other files without an extern statement • Have a prototype in each file that uses the function

  5. Notes on Compiling Multiple-Source-File Programs • Keyword static • Specifies that variables can only be used in the file in which they are defined • Programs with multiple source files • Tedious to compile everything if small changes have been made to only one file • Can recompile only the changed files • Procedure varies on system • UNIX: make utility

  6. Structures • Structures • Collections of related variables (aggregates) under one name • Can contain variables of different data types • Commonly used to define records to be stored in files • Combined with pointers, can create linked lists, stacks, queues, and trees

  7. Structure Definitions • Example struct card { char *face; char *suit; }; • struct introduces the definition for structure card • card is the structure name and is used to declare variables of the structure type • card contains two members of type char * • These members are face and suit

  8. Structure Definitions • struct information • A struct cannot contain an instance of itself • Can contain a member that is a pointer to the same structure type • A structure definition does not reserve space in memory • Instead creates a new data type used to declare structure variables • Declarations • Declared like other variables: card oneCard, deck[ 52 ], *cPtr; • Can use a comma separated list: struct card { char *face; char *suit; } oneCard, deck[ 52 ], *cPtr;

  9. Structure Definitions • Valid Operations • Assigning a structure to a structure of the same type • Taking the address (&) of a structure • Accessing the members of a structure • Using the sizeof operator to determine the size of a structure

  10. Accessing Members of Structures • Accessing structure members • Dot operator (.) used with structure variables card myCard; printf( "%s", myCard.suit ); • Arrow operator (->) used with pointers to structure variables card *myCardPtr = &myCard; printf( "%s", myCardPtr->suit ); • myCardPtr->suit is equivalent to ( *myCardPtr ).suit

  11. Using Structures With Functions • Passing structures to functions • Pass entire structure • Or, pass individual members • Both pass call by value • To pass structures call-by-reference • Pass its address • Pass reference to it • To pass arrays call-by-value • Create a structure with the array as a member • Pass the structure

  12. typedef • typedef • Creates synonyms (aliases) for previously defined data types • Use typedef to create shorter type names • Example: typedef struct Card *CardPtr; • Defines a new type name CardPtr as a synonym for type struct Card * • typedef does not create a new data type • Only creates an alias

  13. Abstract Data Types • A data type is a set of values and a collection of operations on those values. • An abstract data type is one that we create. • It has an interface that defines the data type and the operations that can act upon it. • It has an implementation of the functions declared in the interface. • Is is used by a client, who does not care about the implementation details.

  14. ADT Example • Let’s consider an ADT for a Histrogram. What might its operations be? Histogram *h; is_new_key(h, key); h = create_histogram(); key = get_least_key(h); key = get_next_key(h, current_key); increment_count(h, key); key_count(h) get_least_freq(h); max_frequency(h) get_next_freq(h); destroy_hisogram(h);

  15. ADT Example (cont) • The ADT should be hidden in its own file. The implementation details are encapsulated so that the client is unaware. • Suppose you get a better idea on how to implement histograms. Just change the implementation and recompile. No changed to the client are required!

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