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C++ Programming Basics Chapter 1 Lecture CSIS 10A. Agenda. Hardware Basics The IDE My First Program Its all G(r)eek to me Variables and Declarations Input and Output. ALU. Control. Input. Mouse Keyboard Scanner Hard Disk Floppy Disk Monitor Printer Speakers. Memory. Output.
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Agenda • Hardware Basics • The IDE • My First Program • Its all G(r)eek to me • Variables and Declarations • Input and Output
ALU Control Input Mouse Keyboard Scanner Hard Disk Floppy Disk Monitor Printer Speakers Memory Output Anatomy of a Computer
The CPU uses machine language Assembly instructions to calculate the radius of a circle: LOAD radius LOAD pi MULTIPLY LOAD two MULTIPLY STORE circle
Compilers to the Rescue ! High level languages like C++ allows writing code that is easier to understand and universally works on any CPU. circle=2.0*radius*pi; The compiler is what translates instructions from C++ into Machine language.
Agenda • Hardware Basics • The IDE • My First Program • Its all G(r)eek to me • Variables and Declarations • Input and Output
THE MECHANICS OF WRITING A PROGRAM • Editing -- Writing a program • Compiling -- Translating from C++ into machine language • Linking -- Combining your program with other libraries • Running – Letting the computer execute a program • Debugging – Running step by step through a program searching for mistakes The Integrated Development Environment (IDE) combines 1-5.
Agenda • Hardware Basics • The IDE • My First Program • Its all G(r)eek to me • Variables and Declarations • Input and Output
Hello World ! • Lets start off the traditional way • Program that prints out “Hello World” on your output console (your screen) • Lets start off on our journey…..
Steps • Create new source file • Write the code • Create a workspace (only in MSVC++) • Compile • Link • Execute
Agenda • Hardware Basics • The IDE • My First Program • Its all G(r)eek to me • Variables and Declarations • Input and Output
It’s all G(r)eek to me • … actually, its C++ • Lets dissect and analyze a simple program
20,000 ft. above sea level #include <iostream> using namespace std; int main() { // This is my first program cout << "Hello World" << endl; system("pause"); return 0; }
20,000 leagues under the sea #include <iostream> • Actually includes some information into your code • Contains some definitions that are needed for your code • More of this later on in the course
22,000 leagues under the sea using namespace std; • This line refers to a set of standard object name definitions • For now, this is “boilerplate”—stick it in cause it makes everything work!!
… deeper…. • int main() • This is the piece of code (function) that is operated on first when a program is executed • What’s a function ??? • …. all that’s coming soon …
… even deeper…. • //This is my first program • This is a comment you write to yourself • Useful when writing large programs • Starts with a //
… and deeper….. • Output operator cout << “Hi”<<endl; • cout is the console monitor (your display) • << is the output operator. Use to chain together your output message. • “Hi”is a string literal • endl means end-line (like enter key)
… getting sleepy?….. • For the Bloodshed environment…Hold the display open so you can read it (pressing a key will continue) system("pause"); • Finish up this program, return a 0 to operating system (everything ended OK) return 0;
… and even deeper …. • {} delineates the code block • Each line ends with a ;
Other types of cout statement cout<< “ my age is” <<endl << 39<<endl; cout<< “ my age is 39”; cout<< “ what’s your’s”; Escape with \ Output a “ cout<<“ \” ” <<endl; Output a endl cout<<“\n”;
Tom’s All Purpose Program Shell #include <iostream> using namespace std; int main() { // Your code here ... system("pause"); return 0; } • Future slides may neglect some of the above components for clarity
You Do It • Modify your hello world program to print your name, address and phone number (COULD BE FAKE!) on three lines: Tom Rebold 1600 Pennsylvania Ave 123-456-7890 Experiment with line breaks
Lets get moving….. • We’ll learn as we proceed • You’ll be saying “Aha!” or “Oho!” when you hear these terms again • Let’s play around a bit more
What more ? • Variables and Declarations • Getting User Input
Variables and Declarations • Variables represent storage locations in the computer’s memory variable = expression • Assignment is from right to left n = 5; • Would give n the value 5
Using int Variables int main() { int m,n; m = 44; cout << “m = “ << m; n = m + 33; cout << “ and n = “ << n << endl; }
m int Clearing the haze int m; m = 44.0; 44
m 44 int n int Clearing the haze int m = 44, n; n = m + 33; 44 + 33 = 77 77
Want more ? • Variables and Declarations • Getting User Input
User Input with cin • How shall I feed in data ? • Remember cout ? • Meet cin cin >> m; • Will put the value entered through the console (keyboard) into m
User Input with cin int main() { cout << "Enter the value of m:"; cin >> m; cout << "m = " << m << endl; }
User Input with cin int main() { cout << “Enter the value of m:”; cin >> m; cout << “m = “ << m << endl; } HEY THERE’S SOMETHING WRONG HERE !!!
User Input with cin int main() { int m; cout << "Enter the value of m:"; cin >> m; cout << "m = " << m << endl; }
Your turn () • from hello.cpp File>SaveAs age.cpp • Delete all the cout statements. Add lines to: a) Declare a variable called age b) Display a message asking for data (such as “tell me your age”)c) read the data into age d) display the variable age with a descriptive message. (refer to slide 34)
That’s a wrap ! • What we learned so far: • How to write a basic C++ program • The structure of a program • Displaying to the console (cout) • Variables • Getting user input via the console (cin)