Basics of C/C++ Programming: Difference between revisions

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Janno Tomingas: janno.tomingas@itcollege.ee
Janno Tomingas: janno.tomingas@itcollege.ee
=== Video recordings of lectures and practices ===
Descending date order.
https://echo360.org.uk/media/c002b483-d428-4249-842a-9e92fdebfce8/public
https://echo360.org.uk/media/7efb0957-f384-4eb1-85ad-dd713fe4d65d/public
https://echo360.org.uk/media/bba448ab-8a38-405c-b2a2-5353e227265f/public
https://echo360.org.uk/media/df9ae848-a582-4ba2-999a-8df18d3132c6/public
https://echo360.org.uk/media/02aa7ba3-4bcc-4ace-b676-fd04b58eeff8/public
https://echo360.org.uk/media/8c1485c5-61f3-4062-851d-916906503fd3/public
https://echo360.org.uk/media/2e7e5c6a-10af-4b8c-8303-2e6e4650a206/public
https://echo360.org.uk/media/3917eeef-a127-4338-85e5-207d692504b7/public
https://echo360.org.uk/media/54f0ef26-6ef2-4bc7-9637-c3cde6a27aaa/public
https://echo360.org.uk/media/e099b072-a8ab-4c4b-9c3e-532715cc2d7e/public
https://echo360.org.uk/media/6f39d546-5572-4cda-ad97-e61b968506ff/public
https://echo360.org.uk/media/c02ce02d-9e01-45dd-9f54-3be66a1dc2b2/public
https://echo360.org.uk/media/2cb53a4e-f2b7-44b7-9bd6-93d90b26043b/public
https://echo360.org.uk/media/d366f877-b4ae-4fcc-a90c-0d433772252a/public
https://echo360.org.uk/media/35cd1108-141b-4a1a-8fb2-63e5f3a5b766/public
https://echo360.org.uk/media/befc74e4-5873-4c34-a65f-84ebd00e3370/public
https://echo360.org.uk/media/c3a24815-2b5c-4e3c-8649-bebde59784a3/public
=== Code from lectures ===
http://enos.itcollege.ee/~rliiv/


== C ==
== C ==
=== Lectures ===


=== Practices ===
=== Practices ===
Line 15: Line 56:
====== Practice 1 ======
====== Practice 1 ======
Console input/output, conditions, loops, pointers, arrays, functions
Console input/output, conditions, loops, pointers, arrays, functions


====== Practice 2 ======
====== Practice 2 ======
Line 69: Line 109:


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).
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 ===
=== Assignment ===
Line 111: Line 158:
== C++ ==
== C++ ==


=== Lectures C++ ===
=== Practices ===
====== Practice 3 (second half) ======
C++ console i/o, std::string, std::vector, references, range based for, auto


=== Practices ===
1. Write a Hello, World! program in C++
 
2. Write a program that performs an addition operation based on user input. A sample input string: "2+2".
 
3. Write a program that asks the user for his name, stores it in an std::string and outputs the name back to the console window.
 
4. Write a program that asks the user for several strings and stores them in an std::vector. Upon receiving the last string, the program should output all strings in the order they were received.
 
5. Modify the last program by adding a function to modify a string by reference. Use that function on all input strings.
 
6. Modify the last program to output the strings using a range based for loop. Bind the values to an auto&.
 
====== Practice 4 ======
file i/o, command line parameters, new/delete, classes, constructors/destructors, smart pointers
 
1. Read strings from a file into a std::vector<std::string>, then print them out to another file.
 
2. Modify the last program to read two file names from the command line and use these file names for files.
 
3. Create a class that logs its creation and destruction via std::cout. Use a custom defined constructor and destructor for that.
Observe how actions are logged in different scenarios of instance creation and destruction, including smart pointers.
 
====== Practice 5 ======
dynamic inheritance, (constructor) overloading, simple templates
 
1. Dynamic inheritance
* Create a base class for several shape types, called Shape with:
** virtual default destructor
** an abstract function that returns the Shape's area
** an abstract function that returns the Shape's name
* Create classes Rectangle and Shape that override the Shape and implement its methods
* Use the classes in an std::vector<std::unique_ptr<Shape>> to find the names and areas of several mixed Shapes
* Add an overloaded constructor to Rectangle that enables the user to customize the name of some Rectangles
 
2. Exercise
* Create a hierarchy of Animals similarly to the Shapes (with animal names and sounds)
* Provide an overloaded constructor for some Animal
 
3. Simple templates
* Create a Queue of ints, that uses an std::deque as an underlying datatype
* Provide methods to queue and dequeue values
* Convert the Queue to a template class
 
4. Exercise
* Create an Accumulator of ints
** stores an int as a member variable
** initial value of the accumulator is specified via the constructor
** has a member function that adds a value to the stored value (using the operator +=)
** has a member function that fetches the stored value
* Template the Accumulator to store and add any type of values
* (optional) Create a class Distance that can be used with the Accumulator
** wraps some value (like an int or a double) in a class
** overloads the operator+=
 
====== Practice 6 ======
function pointers, std::function, lambdas, std::algorithm
 
1. Create a function that counts the number of odd numbers in an std::vector<int>
* Store the function in a function pointer
* Call the function via the function pointer
* Store the function in an std::function
* Call the function via the std::function variable
 
2. Re-implement the odd function counter as a lambda
* Store the lambda in an std::function
* Store the lambda in auto
* Call the lambda
 
3. Exercise: Create a lambda that returns the position of the first negative number in a std::vector<int>
 
4. Lambda capture modes
* Default by value
* Default by reference
* Named by value
** Create a lambda that calculates the factorial of an int that is captured by value
* Named by reference
** Create a lambda that counts the number of negative numbers in an std::vector<int> that is captured by reference
 
5. Create a function zero_if:
* Takes a reference to a container of ints as its first argument
* Takes a comparison function as its second argument (std::function<bool(int)>)
* Returns void
* Sets each such value to 0 in the container for which the function returns true
 
6. std::algorithm (Without looping!)
* Find the largest element in an std::vector<int>
* Sort a vector of ints
** ascending
** descending, using a custom comparer
* Count the number of strings that have a length of over 5 characters in std::vector<std::string>
* Reverse all strings in a std::vector<std::string>
 
====== Practice 7 ======
std::algorithm continued, nlohmann::json (consuming header only libraries)
 
[https://www.w3resource.com/JSON/structures.php json structure]
 
1. Create a struct Person that has two fields: a name and an ID number
 
2. Using std::algorithm
* Find a person by name from a std::vector<Person>
* Find a person by the ID number from a vector<Person>
  vector<Person> people
  {
    Person { 11, "Jack"},
    Person { 43, "John Doe"},
    Person { 42, "Melissa"}
  };
  int idToFind = 43;
  auto location = find_if(begin(people), end(people), [idToFind](Person const& person)
  {
    return person.id == idToFind;
  });
  if (location != end(people))
  {
    // Person found!
    Person found = *location;
  }
* Erase all negative values from a std::vector<int>
** Use std::remove_if to move all elements to be kept to the beginning of vector
** Use std::vector.erase() to erase the unnecessary elements from the end of the vector
  vector<int> ints{ -1, 2, -3, 4, -5, 6, -7, 8 };
  auto firstToRemove = remove_if(begin(ints), end(ints), [](int value)
  {
    return value < 0;
  });
  ints.erase(firstToRemove, end(ints));
* Remove all people whose name is longer than 4 characters and whose ID is odd from an std::vector<Person>
  // Remove people whose id is odd and name longer than 4 characters
  auto lambda = [](Person const& person)
  {
    return person.id % 2 == 1 && person.name.length() > 4;
  };
 
 
3. Consuming header only libraries (the simplest way)
* Download the necessary header file
* Move the header file to a well-known folder (project folder, some subfolder, etc)
* #include the header file by specifying a relative path to the header
 
4. Using the nlohmann::json library
* Open a .json file and read it into a nlohmann::json object in memory
* Open a json file that contains some simple data (int, string, bool, array of ints)
** Read an integer from the json into an int
** Read a string from the json into an std::string
** Read a boolean from the json into a bool
** Read an array of ints from the json into an std::vector<int>
 
[https://drive.google.com/open?id=1Hd80rp7kQtOeO7r4avLXPLa2SnLW9BVU simple_data.json]
 
  ifstream simple_file("simple_data.json");
  nlohmann::json simple_json;
  simple_file >> simple_json;
  simple_file.close();
  int integer = simple_json["integer"];
  string str = simple_json["string"];
  bool b = simple_json["boolean"];
  vector<int> manyInts = simple_json["ints"];
 
  // Another way
  int integer2 = simple_json.at("integer").get<int>();
* Open a json file that contains a single item with two integral values ("width" and "height")
** Read the object from the json into a struct Rectangle { int width; int height; }
 
[https://drive.google.com/open?id=1DUKCKLRabTcJ6d2_JpCj-v-o8vU88w60 rectangle.json]
 
  struct Rectangle
  {
    int width;
    int height;
  };
  void from_json(const nlohmann::json& j, Rectangle& r) {
    r.width = j.at("width").get<int>();
    r.height = j.at("height").get<int>();
  }
 
  ifstream rectangle_file("rectangle.json");
  nlohmann::json rectangle_json;
  rectangle_file >> rectangle_json;
  rectangle_file.close();
  Rectangle rect = rectangle_json;
* Open a json file that contains an array of items from the previous assignment
** Read the array from the json into an std::vector<Rectangle>
 
 
[https://drive.google.com/open?id=1e9rNgP6_QPg88NhM5LpEm7i75twWPjB1 rectangles.json]
 
  ifstream rectangles_file("rectangles.json");
  nlohmann::json rectangles_json;
  rectangles_file >> rectangles_json;
  rectangles_file.close();
  vector<Rectangle> rects = rectangles_json;


=== Assignment ===
=== Assignment ===
==== Pizza Shop: ====


== Exploits ==
Write a program that calculates the prices for pizzas and tells the pizza shop owner if they have enough ingredients to fill the order.


=== Lectures ===


=== Practices ===
You are provided 3 files: [https://drive.google.com/open?id=18RY7Nnynd0LmHa74O2NJ_yzAf6fdIcXz recipes.json], [https://drive.google.com/open?id=1RS4ju4d9FTFkN4IjXWQBmHOx-TAQy_qH ingredients.json] and [https://drive.google.com/open?id=1CjoGQ-luAUoyFGpBHEG_Y8pb1PTu3BGp prices.json]. These are all example files and your code must work with any kind of such file that matches the object syntax.


====== Practice 1 ======
Each file contains a list of objects whose schema is defined below.
Assembly language


Setting up your environment:
Prices contains the ids and prices for each price.
* Create a new empty project,
* Add a main.cpp file,
* Under project "Properties -> C/C++ -> Code Generation" set Security Check to Disable Security Check;


To view disassembly:
Ingredients contains the names, stock counts (total available quantity) and priceTypes for each ingredient - this is the amount of ingredients available for you during one program run. Ingredient priceType is matched with a Price from prices.json file (match them by their id number).
* While debugging your program, open the disassembly window at Debug -> Windows -> Disassembly;


Recipes contains pizzas with ingredients - these are the same ingredients as in ingredients.json file (match them by their name).


2. Create an integer variable i:
* Assign a value to i,
* Add 1 to i,
* Inspect the resulting assembly instructions;


Your program must read all .json files and provide console input where you can enter a pizza (pizza name) to be made. You can make any number of pizzas (at least until there are enough ingredients left).


3. Using what you have learned:
==== Program usage: ====
* Create an integer variable a,
* Using assembly, assign a value to a,
* Using assembly, add 1 to a,
* Verify, that the resulting value is correct;


1. Console asks for pizza name to be made


4. Create a character array c to hold 3 characters:
2. User enters pizza name
* Fill in the array one by one,
* Inspect the resulting assembly instructions;


3.a. When the pizza can be made (is made):


5. Using what you have learned:
Print to console the total price of the pizza.
* Create a integer array d to hold 2 ints,
* Using assembly, fill the array with data,
* Verify, that the array is filled with expected values;


Ingredients used must be taken off your stock.


6. Create a simple if:
3.b. When the pizza cannot be made:
* Subtract 1 from int i if i is equal to 2,
* Inspect the resulting assembly instructions;


Print out which ingredients are missing and how many.


7. Using what you have learned:
4. --Return to step 1--
* Create an if conditional, that subtracts 1 from int a if int i and a are equal,
* Verify, that the conditional works as expected;


====== Practice 2 ======
==== Datatypes (schema): ====
Assembly language continued, stack smashing


1. Create a function that takes no arguments
===== Pizza: =====
* Call the function
* Inspect the resulting assembly instructions;


name - string


2. Using what you have learned:
ingredients - list of strings
* Call the function using assembly,
* Verify that the function gets called;


===== Ingredient: =====


3. Create an add function:
name - string
* The function should return the result of adding two integers passed in as parameters,
* Call the function and store the result in a variable,
* Inspect the resulting assembly instructions;


quantity - integer


4. Using what you have learned:
priceType - integer
* Create a subtract function,
* Use assembly to call the subtract function with different values and store the result in a variable,
* Verify, that the function call works as expected and that the value gets stored;


===== Price: =====


5. Create a function that internally holds an array of only one void* and takes a void* as a parameter:
id - integer
* Write over the bounds of the array and observe what happens,
* Try passing different pointers to the function;


price - double


=== Assignment ===
== Exploits ==
Do some research on vulnerabilities related to the following topics:


* Buffer overflow (stack smashing, code injection, arc injection),
=== Lectures ===
* Arithmetic over-/underflow,
* Memory leaks,
* Double free (and double delete),
* Formatted output,
* Concurrency,
* File I/O (symlinks, hardlinks);


=== Practices ===


Write an essay, that describes the causes, examples, and mitigation strategies for all of the topics.
=== Assignment ===


== History ==
== History ==
==== [[Basics_of_C/C%2B%2B_Programming 2016]] ====
==== [[Basics_of_C/C%2B%2B_Programming 2016]] ====

Latest revision as of 00:12, 3 January 2018

Introduction

Lecturers

Rait Liiv: rait.liiv@itcollege.ee

Janno Tomingas: janno.tomingas@itcollege.ee


Video recordings of lectures and practices

Descending date order.

https://echo360.org.uk/media/c002b483-d428-4249-842a-9e92fdebfce8/public

https://echo360.org.uk/media/7efb0957-f384-4eb1-85ad-dd713fe4d65d/public

https://echo360.org.uk/media/bba448ab-8a38-405c-b2a2-5353e227265f/public

https://echo360.org.uk/media/df9ae848-a582-4ba2-999a-8df18d3132c6/public

https://echo360.org.uk/media/02aa7ba3-4bcc-4ace-b676-fd04b58eeff8/public

https://echo360.org.uk/media/8c1485c5-61f3-4062-851d-916906503fd3/public

https://echo360.org.uk/media/2e7e5c6a-10af-4b8c-8303-2e6e4650a206/public

https://echo360.org.uk/media/3917eeef-a127-4338-85e5-207d692504b7/public

https://echo360.org.uk/media/54f0ef26-6ef2-4bc7-9637-c3cde6a27aaa/public


https://echo360.org.uk/media/e099b072-a8ab-4c4b-9c3e-532715cc2d7e/public

https://echo360.org.uk/media/6f39d546-5572-4cda-ad97-e61b968506ff/public

https://echo360.org.uk/media/c02ce02d-9e01-45dd-9f54-3be66a1dc2b2/public

https://echo360.org.uk/media/2cb53a4e-f2b7-44b7-9bd6-93d90b26043b/public

https://echo360.org.uk/media/d366f877-b4ae-4fcc-a90c-0d433772252a/public

https://echo360.org.uk/media/35cd1108-141b-4a1a-8fb2-63e5f3a5b766/public

https://echo360.org.uk/media/befc74e4-5873-4c34-a65f-84ebd00e3370/public

https://echo360.org.uk/media/c3a24815-2b5c-4e3c-8649-bebde59784a3/public

Code from lectures

http://enos.itcollege.ee/~rliiv/

C

Practices

Practice 1

Console input/output, conditions, loops, pointers, arrays, functions

Practice 2

File input/output, dynamic memory allocation, structs, .h/.c files


1. Write a program that outputs the contents of a text file into the console character by character.

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.

3. Write a program that reads the contents of a whole text file into a dynamically sized array of characters (and outputs the information into a new file).

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;
Hints:
  • 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

C++

Practices

Practice 3 (second half)

C++ console i/o, std::string, std::vector, references, range based for, auto

1. Write a Hello, World! program in C++

2. Write a program that performs an addition operation based on user input. A sample input string: "2+2".

3. Write a program that asks the user for his name, stores it in an std::string and outputs the name back to the console window.

4. Write a program that asks the user for several strings and stores them in an std::vector. Upon receiving the last string, the program should output all strings in the order they were received.

5. Modify the last program by adding a function to modify a string by reference. Use that function on all input strings.

6. Modify the last program to output the strings using a range based for loop. Bind the values to an auto&.

Practice 4

file i/o, command line parameters, new/delete, classes, constructors/destructors, smart pointers

1. Read strings from a file into a std::vector<std::string>, then print them out to another file.

2. Modify the last program to read two file names from the command line and use these file names for files.

3. Create a class that logs its creation and destruction via std::cout. Use a custom defined constructor and destructor for that. Observe how actions are logged in different scenarios of instance creation and destruction, including smart pointers.

Practice 5

dynamic inheritance, (constructor) overloading, simple templates

1. Dynamic inheritance

  • Create a base class for several shape types, called Shape with:
    • virtual default destructor
    • an abstract function that returns the Shape's area
    • an abstract function that returns the Shape's name
  • Create classes Rectangle and Shape that override the Shape and implement its methods
  • Use the classes in an std::vector<std::unique_ptr<Shape>> to find the names and areas of several mixed Shapes
  • Add an overloaded constructor to Rectangle that enables the user to customize the name of some Rectangles

2. Exercise

  • Create a hierarchy of Animals similarly to the Shapes (with animal names and sounds)
  • Provide an overloaded constructor for some Animal

3. Simple templates

  • Create a Queue of ints, that uses an std::deque as an underlying datatype
  • Provide methods to queue and dequeue values
  • Convert the Queue to a template class

4. Exercise

  • Create an Accumulator of ints
    • stores an int as a member variable
    • initial value of the accumulator is specified via the constructor
    • has a member function that adds a value to the stored value (using the operator +=)
    • has a member function that fetches the stored value
  • Template the Accumulator to store and add any type of values
  • (optional) Create a class Distance that can be used with the Accumulator
    • wraps some value (like an int or a double) in a class
    • overloads the operator+=
Practice 6

function pointers, std::function, lambdas, std::algorithm

1. Create a function that counts the number of odd numbers in an std::vector<int>

  • Store the function in a function pointer
  • Call the function via the function pointer
  • Store the function in an std::function
  • Call the function via the std::function variable

2. Re-implement the odd function counter as a lambda

  • Store the lambda in an std::function
  • Store the lambda in auto
  • Call the lambda

3. Exercise: Create a lambda that returns the position of the first negative number in a std::vector<int>

4. Lambda capture modes

  • Default by value
  • Default by reference
  • Named by value
    • Create a lambda that calculates the factorial of an int that is captured by value
  • Named by reference
    • Create a lambda that counts the number of negative numbers in an std::vector<int> that is captured by reference

5. Create a function zero_if:

  • Takes a reference to a container of ints as its first argument
  • Takes a comparison function as its second argument (std::function<bool(int)>)
  • Returns void
  • Sets each such value to 0 in the container for which the function returns true

6. std::algorithm (Without looping!)

  • Find the largest element in an std::vector<int>
  • Sort a vector of ints
    • ascending
    • descending, using a custom comparer
  • Count the number of strings that have a length of over 5 characters in std::vector<std::string>
  • Reverse all strings in a std::vector<std::string>
Practice 7

std::algorithm continued, nlohmann::json (consuming header only libraries)

json structure

1. Create a struct Person that has two fields: a name and an ID number

2. Using std::algorithm

  • Find a person by name from a std::vector<Person>
  • Find a person by the ID number from a vector<Person>
 vector<Person> people
 {
   Person { 11, "Jack"},
   Person { 43, "John Doe"},
   Person { 42, "Melissa"}
 };
 int idToFind = 43;
 auto location = find_if(begin(people), end(people), [idToFind](Person const& person)
 {
   return person.id == idToFind;
 });
 if (location != end(people))
 {
   // Person found!
   Person found = *location;
 }
  • Erase all negative values from a std::vector<int>
    • Use std::remove_if to move all elements to be kept to the beginning of vector
    • Use std::vector.erase() to erase the unnecessary elements from the end of the vector
 vector<int> ints{ -1, 2, -3, 4, -5, 6, -7, 8 };
 auto firstToRemove = remove_if(begin(ints), end(ints), [](int value) 
 {
   return value < 0;
 });
 ints.erase(firstToRemove, end(ints));
  • Remove all people whose name is longer than 4 characters and whose ID is odd from an std::vector<Person>
 // Remove people whose id is odd and name longer than 4 characters
 auto lambda = [](Person const& person)
 {
   return person.id % 2 == 1 && person.name.length() > 4;
 };


3. Consuming header only libraries (the simplest way)

  • Download the necessary header file
  • Move the header file to a well-known folder (project folder, some subfolder, etc)
  • #include the header file by specifying a relative path to the header

4. Using the nlohmann::json library

  • Open a .json file and read it into a nlohmann::json object in memory
  • Open a json file that contains some simple data (int, string, bool, array of ints)
    • Read an integer from the json into an int
    • Read a string from the json into an std::string
    • Read a boolean from the json into a bool
    • Read an array of ints from the json into an std::vector<int>

simple_data.json

 ifstream simple_file("simple_data.json");
 nlohmann::json simple_json;
 simple_file >> simple_json;
 simple_file.close();
 int integer = simple_json["integer"];
 string str = simple_json["string"];
 bool b = simple_json["boolean"];
 vector<int> manyInts = simple_json["ints"];
 // Another way
 int integer2 = simple_json.at("integer").get<int>();
  • Open a json file that contains a single item with two integral values ("width" and "height")
    • Read the object from the json into a struct Rectangle { int width; int height; }

rectangle.json

 struct Rectangle
 {
   int width; 
   int height;
 };
 void from_json(const nlohmann::json& j, Rectangle& r) {
   r.width = j.at("width").get<int>();
   r.height = j.at("height").get<int>();
 }
 ifstream rectangle_file("rectangle.json");
 nlohmann::json rectangle_json;
 rectangle_file >> rectangle_json;
 rectangle_file.close();
 Rectangle rect = rectangle_json;
  • Open a json file that contains an array of items from the previous assignment
    • Read the array from the json into an std::vector<Rectangle>


rectangles.json

 ifstream rectangles_file("rectangles.json");
 nlohmann::json rectangles_json;
 rectangles_file >> rectangles_json;
 rectangles_file.close();
 vector<Rectangle> rects = rectangles_json;

Assignment

Pizza Shop:

Write a program that calculates the prices for pizzas and tells the pizza shop owner if they have enough ingredients to fill the order.


You are provided 3 files: recipes.json, ingredients.json and prices.json. These are all example files and your code must work with any kind of such file that matches the object syntax.

Each file contains a list of objects whose schema is defined below.

Prices contains the ids and prices for each price.

Ingredients contains the names, stock counts (total available quantity) and priceTypes for each ingredient - this is the amount of ingredients available for you during one program run. Ingredient priceType is matched with a Price from prices.json file (match them by their id number).

Recipes contains pizzas with ingredients - these are the same ingredients as in ingredients.json file (match them by their name).


Your program must read all .json files and provide console input where you can enter a pizza (pizza name) to be made. You can make any number of pizzas (at least until there are enough ingredients left).

Program usage:

1. Console asks for pizza name to be made

2. User enters pizza name

3.a. When the pizza can be made (is made):

Print to console the total price of the pizza.

Ingredients used must be taken off your stock.

3.b. When the pizza cannot be made:

Print out which ingredients are missing and how many.

4. --Return to step 1--

Datatypes (schema):

Pizza:

name - string

ingredients - list of strings

Ingredient:

name - string

quantity - integer

priceType - integer

Price:

id - integer

price - double

Exploits

Lectures

Practices

Assignment

History

Basics_of_C/C++_Programming 2016