METHODS Introduction to Systems Programming - COMP 1005, 1405 Instructor : Behnam Hajian

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 4 Methods F Introducing Methods –Benefits of methods, Declaring Methods, and Calling Methods F Passing Parameters –Pass by Value F Overloading.
Advertisements

Chapter 5 Functions.
Liang, Introduction to Programming with C++, Second Edition, (c) 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter 5 Function Basics.
Chapter 4 Methods F Introducing Methods –Benefits of methods, Declaring Methods, and Calling Methods F Passing Parameters –Pass by Value F Overloading.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Fifth Edition, (c) 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter 5 Methods.
Math class methods & User defined methods Introduction to Computers and Programming in JAVA: V
COMP 14 Introduction to Programming Miguel A. Otaduy May 25, 2004.
Introduction to Java Programming, 4E Y. Daniel Liang.
The UNIVERSITY of NORTH CAROLINA at CHAPEL HILL Adrian Ilie COMP 14 Introduction to Programming Adrian Ilie July 8, 2005.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Sixth Edition, (c) 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter 5 Methods.
1 Chapter 6 Methods. 2 Objectives F To declare methods, invoke methods, and pass arguments to a method. F To use method overloading and know ambiguous.
Chapter 4 Methods F Introducing Methods –Benefits of methods, Declaring Methods, and Calling Methods F Passing Parameters –Pass by Value F Overloading.
1 Chapter 5 Methods. 2 Introducing Methods A method is a collection of statements that are grouped together to perform an operation.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved COS240 O-O Languages AUBG,
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter 5 Methods.
1 Topic 04 Methods Programming II/A CMC2522 / CIM2561 Bavy Li.
INF120 Basics in JAVA Programming AUBG, COS dept, Spring 2014 Lecture 08 Title: Methods, Part 2 Reference: MalikFarrell, chap 1, Liang, Ch 5.
Chapter 6 Functions 1. Opening Problem 2 Find the sum of integers from 1 to 10, from 20 to 37, and from 35 to 49, respectively.
More with Methods (parameters, reference vs. value, array processing) Corresponds with Chapters 5 and 6.
Chapter 4 Methods F Introducing Methods –Benefits of methods, Declaring Methods, and Calling Methods F Passing Parameters –Pass by Value F Overloading.
 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 Methods Called functions or procedures in other languages Modularize programs by separating its tasks.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Seventh Edition, (c) 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter 5 Methods.
1 Introducing Methods A method is a collection of statements that are grouped together to perform an operation.
Programming Fundamentals I (COSC-1336), Lecture 5 (prepared after Chapter 5 of Liang’s 2011 textbook) Stefan Andrei 4/23/2017 COSC-1336, Lecture 5.
Chapter 5: Methods 1. Objectives To declare methods, invoke methods, and pass arguments to a method (§ ). To use method overloading and know ambiguous.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Sixth Edition, (c) 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Method Abstraction You can.
Methods 1. Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Sixth Edition, (c) 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Introducing Methods.
1 Chapter 6 Methods. 2 Objectives F To declare methods, invoke methods, and pass arguments to a method. F To use method overloading and know ambiguous.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter 5 Methods.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter 5 Methods.
Liang, Introduction to C++ Programming, (c) 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter 6 Advanced Function Features.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Fifth Edition, (c) 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter 4 Methods Chapter.
© Copyright 2013 by Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 1 Chapter 6 Functions.
1 Chapter 6 Methods. 2 Motivation Find the sum of integers from 1 to 10, from 20 to 30, and from 35 to 45, respectively.
1 Chapter 6 Methods. 2 Objectives F To declare methods, invoke methods, and pass arguments to a method. F To use method overloading and know ambiguous.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Sixth Edition, (c) 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter 5 Methods.
1 Static Variable and Method Lecture 9 by Dr. Norazah Yusof.
Chapter 5 Methods 1. Motivations Method : groups statements that perform a function.  Level of abstraction (black box)  Code Reuse – no need to reinvent.
Methods. Introducing Methods A method is a collection of statements that are grouped together to perform an operation.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, (c) 2015 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 Chapter 6 Methods Dr. Musab Zghoul.
Liang, Introduction to C++ Programming, (c) 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved X 1 Chapter 5 Functions Lecturer: Mrs Rohani Hassan.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Chapter 5 Methods.
Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Tenth Edition, (c) 2015 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 1 Chapter 6 Methods.
INF120 Basics in JAVA Programming AUBG, COS dept Lecture 07 Title: Methods, part 1 Reference: MalikFarrell, chap 1, Liang Ch 5.
Reference: COS240 Syllabus
Suppose we want to print out the word MISSISSIPPI in big letters.
Suppose we want to print out the word MISSISSIPPI in big letters.
Chapter 5 Methods.
Chapter 6: Methods CS1: Java Programming Colorado State University
Chapter 6 Functions.
Chapter 5 Functions DDC 2133 Programming II.
Chapter 5 Function Basics
Chapter 5 Functions.
Chapter 6 Methods 1.
Chapter 3 Methods.
Chapter 5 Methods.
Chapter 6 Methods.
Chapter 5 – Part 2 Methods Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved
Chapter 5 Function Basics
Chapter 5 Methods.
Group Status Project Status.
Chapter 6 Methods.
Chapter 5 Methods.
BBIT 212/ CISY 111 Object Oriented Programming (OOP)
Week 4 Lecture-2 Chapter 6 (Methods).
Chapter 5 Methods Liang, Introduction to Java Programming, Eighth Edition, (c) 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved
Methods and Data Passing
Introduction to Methods and Interfaces
Chapter 6: Methods CS1: Java Programming Colorado State University
Presentation transcript:

METHODS Introduction to Systems Programming - COMP 1005, 1405 Instructor : Behnam Hajian

2 Objectives  To declare methods, invoke methods, and pass arguments to a method  To use method overloading and know ambiguous overloading  To determine the scope of local variables  To learn the concept of method abstraction  To know how to use the methods in the Math class  To design and implement methods using stepwise refinement  To group classes into packages

Developing Large Programs  Difficult to manage large code  Teams of people may be involved  Easy to forget what the project is all about  People may leave the company Result: Code should be  well organized  well commented and documented  Organized in a modular form (small coherent parts)

Top Down Design  Begin with the main problem/idea  Divide it into smaller problem/ideas  Further divide each small problem/idea into smaller more manageable parts. The process is termed: Divide and Conquer When to stop?  When the sub-problem/idea is understood and manageable  Coding rule of thumb – a module is 5-30 lines (one page)

Top-Down Module Example

Functions : Organized Development 1. Allow organized development 2. Develop and test small pieces of code 3. Functions assignable to team members 4. Permit code reusability

Function and Organization

What is a Function ?  A function is a module (piece of code) aimed at accomplishing a single task  Note: the scope of the task or its objective may large (recall breakdown of a problem/ideas)

What is a Function ?

setup() function in processing

Functions as Modules of Code Functions are the basic modules in structural programming languages.  Every program has a main function  The main function uses other functions  Each function may use other functions  Functions help organize and develop code

21 Method Abstraction You can think of the method body as a black box that contains the detailed implementation for the method.

22 Benefits of Methods Write a method once and reuse it anywhere. Information hiding. Hide the implementation from the user. Reduce complexity.

23 Introducing Methods A method is a collection of statements that are grouped together to perform an operation.

24 Introducing Methods, cont. Method signature is the combination of the method name and the parameter list. The variables defined in the method header are known as formal parameters. When a method is invoked, you pass a value to the parameter. This value is referred to as actual parameter or argument.

25 Introducing Methods, cont. A method may return a value. The returnValueType is the data type of the value the method returns. If the method does not return a value, the returnValueType is the keyword void. For example, the returnValueType in the main method is void.

26 Calling Methods Listing 5.1 Testing the max method This program demonstrates calling a method max to return the largest of the int values

27 Calling Methods, cont.

28 Trace Method Invocation i is now 5

29 Trace Method Invocation j is now 2

30 Trace Method Invocation invoke max(i, j)

31 Trace Method Invocation invoke max(i, j) Pass the value of i to num1 Pass the value of j to num2

32 Trace Method Invocation declare variable result

33 Trace Method Invocation (num1 > num2) is true since num1 is 5 and num2 is 2

34 Trace Method Invocation result is now 5

35 Trace Method Invocation return result, which is 5

36 Trace Method Invocation return max(i, j) and assign the return value to k

37 Trace Method Invocation Execute the print statement

38 CAUTION A return statement is required for a nonvoid method. The following method is logically correct, but it has a compilation error, because the Java compiler thinks it possible that this method does not return any value. int sign(int n) { if (n > 0) return 1; else if (n == 0) return 0; else if (n < 0) return –1; } To fix this problem, delete if (n<0) in the code.

44 Scope of Local Variables A local variable: a variable defined inside a method. Scope: the part of the program where the variable can be referenced. The scope of a local variable starts from its declaration and continues to the end of the block that contains the variable. A local variable must be declared before it can be used.

45 Scope of Local Variables, cont. You can declare a local variable with the same name multiple times in different non- nesting blocks in a method, but you cannot declare a local variable twice in nested blocks.

46 Scope of Local Variables, cont. A variable declared in the initial action part of a for loop header has its scope in the entire loop. But a variable declared inside a for loop body has its scope limited in the loop body from its declaration and to the end of the block that contains the variable.

47 Scope of Local Variables, cont.

48 Scope of Local Variables, cont. // Fine with no errors void correctMethod() { int x = 1; int y = 1; // i is declared for (int i = 1; i < 10; i++) { x += i; } // i is declared again for (int i = 1; i < 10; i++) { y += i; }

49 Ambiguous Invocation Sometimes there may be two or more possible matches for an invocation of a method, but the compiler cannot determine the most specific match. This is referred to as ambiguous invocation. Ambiguous invocation is a compilation error.

50 Ambiguous Invocation public class AmbiguousOverloading { public static void main(String[] args) { System.out.println(max(1, 2)); } public static double max(int num1, double num2) { if (num1 > num2) return num1; else return num2; } public static double max(double num1, int num2) { if (num1 > num2) return num1; else return num2; }

51 The random Method Generates a random double value greater than or equal to 0.0 and less than 1.0 (0 <= Math.random() < 1.0). Examples: In general,

52 Case Study: Generating Random Characters Computer programs process numerical data and characters. You have seen many examples that involve numerical data. It is also important to understand characters and how to process them. As introduced in Section 2.9, each character has a unique Unicode between 0 and FFFF in hexadecimal (65535 in decimal). To generate a random character is to generate a random integer between 0 and using the following expression: (note that since 0 <= Math.random() < 1.0, you have to add 1 to ) (int)(Math.random() * ( ))

53 Case Study: Generating Random Characters, cont. Now let us consider how to generate a random lowercase letter. The Unicode for lowercase letters are consecutive integers starting from the Unicode for 'a', then for 'b', 'c',..., and 'z'. The Unicode for 'a' is (int)'a' So, a random integer between (int)'a' and (int)'z' is (int)((int)'a' + Math.random() * ((int)'z' - (int)'a' + 1)

54 Case Study: Generating Random Characters, cont. As discussed before all numeric operators can be applied to the char operands. The char operand is cast into a number if the other operand is a number or a character. So, the preceding expression can be simplified as follows: 'a' + Math.random() * ('z' - 'a' + 1) So a random lowercase letter is (char)('a' + Math.random() * ('z' - 'a' + 1))

55 Case Study: Generating Random Characters, cont. To generalize the foregoing discussion, a random character between any two characters ch1 and ch2 with ch1 < ch2 can be generated as follows: (char)(ch1 + Math.random() * (ch2 – ch1 + 1))

56 The RandomCharacter Class // RandomCharacter.java: Generate random characters public class RandomCharacter { /** Generate a random character between ch1 and ch2 */ public static char getRandomCharacter(char ch1, char ch2) { return (char)(ch1 + Math.random() * (ch2 - ch1 + 1)); } /** Generate a random lowercase letter */ public static char getRandomLowerCaseLetter() { return getRandomCharacter('a', 'z'); } /** Generate a random uppercase letter */ public static char getRandomUpperCaseLetter() { return getRandomCharacter('A', 'Z'); } /** Generate a random digit character */ public static char getRandomDigitCharacter() { return getRandomCharacter('0', '9'); }

QUESTIONS?