Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 20081 1 Introduction to Functions CS-2301, System Programming for Non-majors (Slides include materials from The.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 20081 1 Introduction to Functions CS-2301, System Programming for Non-majors (Slides include materials from The."— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 20081 1 Introduction to Functions CS-2301, System Programming for Non-majors (Slides include materials from The C Programming Language, 2 nd ed., by Kernighan and Ritchie and from C: How to Program, 5 th ed., by Deitel and Deitel)

2 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 20082 2 Definition – Function A fragment of code that accepts zero or more argument values and produces a result value and zero or more side effects. A method of encapsulating a subset of a program or a system To hide details To be invoked from multiple places To share with others

3 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 20083 3 Functions – a big Topic Examples Function definition Function prototypes & Header files Pre- and post-conditions Scope and storage class Implementation of functions Recursive functions

4 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 20084 4 Common Functions #include –sin(x) // radians –cos(x) // radians –tan(x) // radians –atan(x) –atan2(y,x) –exp(x) // e x –log(x) // log e x –log10(x) // log 10 x –sqrt(x) // x  0 –pow(x, y) // x y –... #include –printf() –fprintf() –scanf() –sscanf() –... #include –strcpy() –strcat() –strcmp() –strlen() –...

5 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 20085 5 Common Functions (continued) In Kernighan & Ritchie – // for diagnostics, loop invariants, etc. – // for parsing arguments – // time of day and elapsed time – // implementation dependent numbers – // implementation dependent numbers. – // beyond scope of this course

6 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 20086 6 Common Functions (continued) See also the man pages of your system for things like // concurrent execution // network communications... // many, many other facilities Fundamental Rule: if there is a chance that someone else had same problem as you, … … there is probably a package of functions to solve it!

7 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 20087 7 Functions in C resultType functionName( argType 1 arg1, argType 2 arg2, …) { … body … } If no result, resultType should be void Warning if not! If no arguments, use void between ()

8 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 20088 8 Functions in C resultType functionName( argType 1 arg1, argType 2 arg2, …) { … body … }// functionName If no result, resultType should be void Warning if not! If no arguments, use void between () It is good style to always end a function with a comment showing its name

9 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 20089 9 Function Definition Every function definition has the form return-type function-name (argument declarations) { declarations and statements } See top of page 70 in Kernighan & Ritchie

10 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200810CS-2301 B-term 200810 Function Definition Every function definition has the form return-type function-name (argument declarations) { declarations and statements } See top of page 70 in Kernighan & Ritchie For practical purposes, code between {} (inclusive) is a compound statement

11 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200811 Note Functions in C do not allow other functions to be declared within them Like C++, Java Unlike Algol, Pascal All functions defined at “top level” of C programs (Usually) visible to linker Can be linked by any other program that knows the function prototype

12 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200812CS-2301 B-term 200812 Examples double sin(double radians) { … }//sin unsigned int strlen (char *s) { … }//strlen

13 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200813CS-2301 B-term 200813 Note on printf, etc. int printf(char *s,...) { body }//printf In this function header, “…” is not a professor’s place-holder (as often used in these slides) …but an actual sequence of three dots (no spaces between) Meaning:– the number and types of arguments is indeterminate Use to extract the arguments

14 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200814CS-2301 B-term 200814 Questions?

15 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200815CS-2301 B-term 200815 Function Prototypes There are many, many situations in which a function must be used separate from where it is defined – before its definition in the same C program In one or more completely separate C programs This is actually the normal case! Therefore, we need some way to declare a function separate from defining its body. Called a Function Prototype

16 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200816CS-2301 B-term 200816 Function Prototypes (continued) Definition:– a Function Prototype is a language construct in C with the form:– return-type function-name (argument declarations) ;

17 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200817CS-2301 B-term 200817 Function Prototypes (continued) Definition:– a Function Prototype is a language construct in C with the form:– return-type function-name (argument declarations) ; I.e., exactly like a function definition, except with a “;” instead of a body in curly brackets

18 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200818CS-2301 B-term 200818 Purposes of Function Prototype So compiler knows how to compile calls to that function, i.e., –number and types of arguments –type of result As part of a “contract” between developer and programmer who uses the function As part of hiding details of how it works and exposing what it does. A function serves as a “black box.”

19 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200819 Header files In applications with multiple C programs, function prototypes are typically in header files I.e., the ‘.h ’ files that programmers include in their code Grouped by related functions and features To make it easier for developers to understand To make it easier for team development To make a package that can be used by someone else

20 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200820 #include Search the system’s directories in order for a file of the name foo.h Directories can be added with ‘ -I ’ switch to gcc command –E.g., gcc –I myProject/include foo.c –Precedes system directories in search order #include “foo.h” Search the directory where the source program is found first, before -I and system directories

21 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200821 Typical C Programming Style A lot of small C programs, rather than a few large ones Header files to tie them together Makefiles to build or rebuild them in an organized way Later in the term

22 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200822 Definition – Stub A stub is a dummy implementation of a function with an empty body A placeholder while building a program So that it compiles correctly Fill in one-stub at a time Compile and test if possible

23 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200823 Questions?

24 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200824CS-2301 B-term 200824 “Contract” between Developer and User of a Function 1.Function Prototype 2.The pre- and post-conditions –I.e., assertions about what is true before the function is called and what is true after it returns. –A logical way of explaining what the function does

25 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200825Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200825 Definitions Pre-condition:–a characterization or logical statement about the values of the arguments, and values of relevant variables outside the function prior to calling the function Post-condition:–a logical statement or characterization about the result of the function in relation to the values of the arguments and pre-conditions, and changes to values of variables outside the function after the function returns

26 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200826Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200826 Example 1 double sin (double angle); –Pre:– angle is expressed in radians –Post:– result is the familiar sine of angle –Note: this function does not use or change any other variables

27 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200827Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200827 Example 2 int printf (string, arg 1, arg 2, …) –Pre:– string terminated with ‘\0’ and containing conversion codes –Pre:– a buffer maintained by the file system contains zero or more unprinted characters from previous calls. –Post:– args are substituted for conversion codes in copy of string; resulting string is added to buffer –Post:– if ‘\n’ is anywhere in buffer, line is “printed” up to ‘\n’ ; printed characters are cleared from buffer –Post:– result is number of characters added to buffer by printf

28 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200828Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200828 Example 3 float total = 0; int count = 0; int GetNewItem(void) { float input; int rc; printf(“Enter next item:- ”); if ((rc = scanf(“%f”, &input)) != EOF && (rc > 0)) { total += input; count++; };// if return rc; }// GetNewItem

29 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200829Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200829 Example 3 float total = 0; int count = 0; int GetItem(void) { float input; int rc;...; if ((rc = scanf(“%f”, &input)) != EOF && (rc > 0)) { total += input; count++; };// if return rc; }// GetItem Pre:– total is sum of all previous inputs, or zero if none Pre:– count is number of previous inputs, or zero if none Post:– if valid input is received total = total prev + input, count = count prev + 1

30 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200830Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200830 Important Pre- and post-conditions are analogous to loop invariants I.e., they describe something about the data before and after a function is called and the relationship that the function preserves Often are used together with loop invariants … to show that loop invariant is preserved from one iteration to the next

31 Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200831Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 200831 Questions?


Download ppt "Introduction to FunctionsCS-2301 B-term 20081 1 Introduction to Functions CS-2301, System Programming for Non-majors (Slides include materials from The."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google