Basics of C/C++ Programming
Introduction
Lecturers
Rait Liiv: rait.liiv@itcollege.ee
Janno Tomingas: janno.tomingas@itcollege.ee
C
Lectures
Practices
Practice 1
Console input/output, conditions, loops, pointers, arrays, functions
Practice 2
File input/output, dynamic memory allocation, structs, .h/.c files
Additional info:
Always close the file stream after you are done using it.
Make sure to check for error codes.
2. Write a program that dynamically allocates a small array of ints. Fill the array and print its contents. Free the memory after you're done using it.
Additional info:
Use "fseek", "ftell" and "rewind" to find out how large the buffer should be.
Make sure you have enough room for a null terminator. (You may have to assign it to the end of the array yourself)
Remember to free the allocated memory after calling malloc or calloc.
Make sure to check for error codes.
4. Create an implementation of a stack data structure (Stack (abstract data type)) that uses a dynamically allocated array for storage.
- Required functions:
- init - Initializes stack's variables and allocates required dynamic memory with an initial(default) size,
- destroy - Frees all allocated memory and optionally resets other stored information for a stack,
- push - Adds an element to the top of the stack,
- peek - Gets the top element of the stack,
- pop - Gets and removes the top element of the stack;
- Describe the stack struct and functions in a separate .h file,
- Implement the functions in a corresponding .c file,
- Test your stack with some operations. Remember to check for edge cases;
- How do you know which element to access?
- How do you know if an array is full?
- How should the functions behave when a stack is empty?
- How should the functions behave when a stack is full?
- What will happen if any of the functions are called many times or in unexpected order?
5. Write a program that reads an unknown number of integers (each on a separate line) from a file into the stack you created. After reading the whole file, print out all ints that were read (in reverse order).
Practice 3 (first half)
insertion sort, sorting structs
1. Implement insertion sort to sort an array of integers in ascending order.
2. Create a struct to hold integral key-value pairs. Modify the insertion sort algorithm to sort an array of these structs instead.
Assignment
Write a program that reads values from a file and outputs the result to stdout.
Input
Input file's name is "input.txt".
The file contains index-value pairs of integers on a single line. Integers in a pair are separated with a comma (,) and pairs are separated with a semicolon (;).
All indices between 0 and (count_of_pairs - 1) are guaranteed to be present.
The indices are guaranteed to be unique.
The indices are not guaranteed to appear in an ascending order.
Sample input: 1,4;0,2;2,8
Output
The program should output the differences between consecutive values as the index increases.
Output should be printed as a comma separated list of values on a single line to stdout.
For input:
0,1;2,4;1,2
Calculates:
0,1 to 1,2 -> 2 - 1 = 1 1,2 to 2,4 -> 4 - 2 = 2
And outputs:
1,2
Examples
-> 0,2 -> 0 1,2;0,1 -> 1 1,4;0,2;2,8 -> 2,4 1,4;0,2;2,-2 -> 2,-6