c programming in linux

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C Programming in Linux Jacob Chan

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C Programming in Linux. Jacob Chan. C/C++ and Java. Portable Code written in one system and works in another But in C, there are some libraries that need to be run on a certain environment Pthred not in Windows Similarity in programming syntax - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: C Programming in Linux

C Programming in LinuxJacob Chan

Page 2: C Programming in Linux

C/C++ and Java

Portable Code written in one system and works in another

But in C, there are some libraries that need to be run on a certain environment Pthred not in Windows

Similarity in programming syntax Looping, conditionals, switches, functions, arrays, declarations/assignments (different in

C, but almost similar in C++)

Page 3: C Programming in Linux

Differences Between C/C++ and Java

C is faster JVM has a write-once, read anywhere code (this adds overhead) Games are usually written in C/C++

Java is easier to learn C/C++ is hard to grasp because of POINTERS! Java uses pointers, but they are blackboxed

Every object in Java is a pointer Alternative to Java: C#

Page 4: C Programming in Linux

Differences Between C/C++ and Java

C/C++ is more prone to runtime errors Declaring new variables in C/C++ usually has garbage values In Java, they are automatically set them to 0, null, or default value POINTERS Segmentation faults

Memory allocation is sometimes manually set by programmer a[10] with 5 elements will return garbage values for the next 5 Memory errors will print out a segmentation fault error Effect: CRASH!!

Page 5: C Programming in Linux

Differences Between C/C++ and Java

Object-oriented-ness of Java Java is object-oriented, so everything is stored in an object

C is more on procedural There are no classes in C, but there are structs

C++ is a mix of both object-oriented and procedural programming What you can do in C, you can also do in C++ (in most cases)

Page 6: C Programming in Linux

Differences Between C/C++ and Java

Why is Java taught first here? Debate over Java vs C/C++ (Java won) C/C++ needs to be taught still because it is better in some cases than Java

Implementation wise, packages in java are more functional than libraries in C/C++

C/C++ needs external libraries (OpenGL, OpenCV) Java is “younger” and more standardized than C/C++

Packages

Page 7: C Programming in Linux

First C Program (Since we will use this in class)

#include <stdio.h>

int main(void)

{

printf("Hello, world!\n");

return 0;

}

// Save this program as hello.c

Page 8: C Programming in Linux

First C Program (Since we will use this in class)

Then, compile the program with:

gcc –o hello hello.cpp

And run it as:

./hello

The ./ is required in Linux In Windows, it’s okay to ignore this already

Page 9: C Programming in Linux

Exercise

Try printing out command line arguments

int main(int argc, char* argv[])

{

int I;

for(i = 0; i < argc; i++)

{

printf("arg %s\n",argv[i]);

}

return 0; // non-zero means an error

}

Page 10: C Programming in Linux

Exercise

Try adding this line after printf:

printf("%c\n", argv[i][0]);

printf("%s\n", argv[i]+1);

What happens?

Page 11: C Programming in Linux

More on POINTERS

Any variable type can be a pointer type Java declares everything as a pointer

int a;

int *b; //int pointer

b = &a; // & (used for accessing memory address of variable)

a = 5;

printf(“%d\n”,*a); //what happens?

Page 12: C Programming in Linux

Functions

Same as creating methods in Java, but needs to have been declared first before being used

void fxn(){

printf(“I am at fxn\n”);

}

Int main(){

fxn();

return 0;

}

Page 13: C Programming in Linux

Functions

C/C++ has this feature called prototyping (allows functions to be declared before being used)

void fxn();

int main() {

fxn();

return 0;

}

void fxn() {

printf(“I am fxn\n”);

}

Page 14: C Programming in Linux

Functions: Exercise

What is the difference between these two swap methods?void swap(int a, int b){

int temp;

temp = a;

a = b;

b = temp;

}

void swap (int *a, int *b) {

int temp;

temp = *a;

*a = *b;

*b = temp;

}

Page 15: C Programming in Linux

Inputting in Console

printf () – to print out in console

scanf () – to input in console

int main(){

char aChar;

printf("\nEnter a character:");

scanf("%c", &aChar);

printf(“Character is %c”, aChar);

}

Page 16: C Programming in Linux

Array assignment with malloc() and free()

Normal array assignment

int i[20]; //create an array of int with 20 elements

Heap array assignment

int a[] = malloc(sizeof(int) * 20); //create a heap

Difference: dynamic vs static memory (because or realloc() )

Deallocate memory (needed after memory is used. Otherwise, there will be a MEMORY LEAK)

free(a);

Page 17: C Programming in Linux

LAB 2: Sorting algorithm

Write a program sort.c which sorts a list of names I should be able to run this command: ./sort The first line consists of the number of elements in the list Then the program should be able to print out the sorted list The entire thing should be able to sort the names by first name. (to make things

simpler)Example input:4Jack FrostJake LongJane DoeJohnny Appleseed

Make sure that each line should be read as well

Page 18: C Programming in Linux

LAB 2: Sorting algorithm

Sample first lines:int N; //number of elements in list

char *name[]; //string = char * in C

char ipline[128]; //read each line

scanf("%d\n", &N);

name = (char **)malloc(sizeof(char *) * N);

for(j = 0; j < N; ++j) {

gets(ipline);

name[j] = (char *) malloc(strlen(ipline)+1);

strcpy(name[j], ipline);

}

//sort

//printout sorted array

//free

Page 19: C Programming in Linux

LAB 2: Sorting algorithm

Of course, I will have to check if you have a CERTIFICATE OF AUTHORSHIP (failure to do so will null and void your lab)

File name: CS162B_Lab2_<Section>_<Surname>_<ID Number>.tar

Submit on the link provided for your section. Failure to do so will incur a -10

Deadline: Tonight @ 11:55pm

Page 20: C Programming in Linux

Next Meeting

More on C Reading files Using file pointers Other features of C

Page 21: C Programming in Linux

THE END“Faith is taking the first step even if you do not see the whole staircase”