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C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition Chapter 4: Control Structures I (Selection)

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1 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition Chapter 4: Control Structures I (Selection)

2 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 2 Objectives In this chapter you will: Learn about control structures Examine relational and logical operators Explore how to form and evaluate logical (Boolean) expressions Discover how to use the selection control structures if, if...else, and switch in a program Learn to use the assert function to terminate a program

3 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 3 Control Structures A computer can proceed: In sequence Selectively (branch) - making a choice Repetitively (iteratively) - looping Some statements are executed only if certain conditions are met A condition is represented by a logical (Boolean) expression that can be true or false A condition is met if it evaluates to true

4 expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 C++ control structures Selection if if... else switch Repetition for loop while loop do... while loop

5 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 5

6 6 Relational Operators Relational operators: Allow comparisons Require two operands (binary) Return 1 if expression is true, 0 otherwise Comparing values of different data types may produce unpredictable results For example, 8 < '5' should not be done Any nonzero value is treated as true

7 expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 are used in expressions of form: ExpressionA Operator ExpressionB temperature > humidity B * B - 4.0 * A * C > 0.0 abs (number ) == 35 initial ! = ‘Q’ Relational Operators

8 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 8

9 9

10 expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 int x, y ; x = 4; y = 6; EXPRESSIONVALUE x < y true x + 2 < y false x != y true x + 3 >= y true y == x false y == x+2 true y = x + 3 7 (true)

11 expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 In C++ the value 0 represents false ANY non-zero value represents true ‘C’ < ‘G’ is true ‘c’ < ‘g’ is true ‘c’ < ‘G’ is false, because G comes before in the sequence of the ASCII character set Compare ints with ints, floats with floats, chars with chars otherwise implicit type coercion takes place. Use explicit type casting: someFloat (someInt) boolVar < 4 is true, why? boolVar yields …

12 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 12 Comparing string Types Relational operators can be applied to strings Strings are compared character by character, starting with the first character Comparison continues  until either a mismatch is found or  all characters are found equal If two strings of different lengths are compared and the comparison is equal to the last character of the shorter string  The shorter string is less than the larger string

13 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 13 string Comparison Example Suppose we have the following declarations: string str1 = "Hello"; string str2 = "Hi"; string str3 = "Air"; string str4 = "Bill";

14 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 14 Logical (Boolean) Operators Logical (Boolean) operators enable you to combine logical expressions Three logical (Boolean) operators: ! - not && – and || - or Logical operators: take logical values as operands and yield logical values as results ! is unary; && and || are binary operators Putting ! in front of a logical expression reverses its value

15 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 15

16 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 16 Precedence of Operators Relational and logical operators are evaluated from left to right so the associativity is left to right Parentheses can override precedence

17 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 17

18 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 18 //Chapter 4 Logical operators p.157 #include using namespace std; int main() { bool found = true; bool flag = false; int num = 1; double x = 5.2; double y = 3.4; int a = 5, b = 8; int n = 20; char ch = 'B'; cout << "Line 1: !found evaluates to " << !found << endl;//Line 1 cout 4.0 evaluates to " 4.0) << endl;//Line 2 cout << "Line 3: !num evaluates to " << !num << endl;//Line 3 cout = 0) evaluates to " = 0)) << endl;//Line 4 cout = 0)) evaluates to " = 0))) << endl;//Line 5 cout << "Line 6: x + y <= 20.5 evaluates to " << (x + y <= 20.5) << endl; //Line 6 cout = 0) && (n <= 100) evaluates to " = 0) && (n <= 100)) << endl;//Line 7 cout << "Line 8: ('A' <= ch && ch <= 'Z') evaluates to " << ('A' <= ch && ch <= 'Z') << endl;//Line 8 cout << "Line 9: (a + 2 <= b) && !flag evaluates to " << ((a + 2 <= b) && !flag) << endl;//Line 9 return 0; }

19 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 19 Short-Circuit Evaluation Short-circuit evaluation: evaluation of a logical expression are evaluated left to right and stops as soon as the value of the expression is known Example: Assume: age = 25; grade = ‘B’ (age >= 21) || ( x == 5) //Line 1 (grade == ‘A’) && (x >= 7)//Line 2

20 expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 Short-Circuit Example int age, height; age = 25; height = 70; EXPRESSION (age > 50) && (height > 60) false Evaluation can stop now because result of && is only true when both sides are true. It is already determined that the entire expression will be false.

21 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 21 The bool Data Type and Logical (Boolean) Expressions The data type bool has logical (Boolean) values true and false bool, true, and false are reserved words The identifier true has the value 1 The identifier false has the value 0

22 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 22 Logical (Boolean) Expressions (continued) Logical expressions can be unpredictable The following expression appears to represent a comparison of 0, num, and 10: 0 <= num <= 10  It always evaluates true because 0 <= num evaluates to either 0 or 1, and 0 <= 10 is true and 1 <= 10 is true The correct way to write this expression is: 0 <= num && num <= 10

23 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 23 One-Way (if) Selection The syntax of one-way selection is: if(expression) statement Statement is executed if the value of the expression is true Statement is bypassed if the value is false; program goes to the next statement

24 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 24 The syntax of one-way selection is: if(expression) statement Statement is executed if the value of the expression is true Statement is bypassed if the value is false; program goes to the next statement

25 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 25 One-Way (if) Selection (continued) The expression is sometimes called a decision maker because it decides whether to execute the statement that follows it The statement following the expression is sometimes called the action statement The expression is usually a logical expression The statement is any C++ statement if is a reserved word

26 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 26 Comparing float Values do not compare float values for equality, compare them for near-equality. float myNumber; float yourNumber; cin >> myNumber; cin >> yourNumber; if ( fabs (myNumber - yourNumber) < 0.00001 ) cout << “They are close enough!” << endl;

27 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 27 Two-way selection takes the form: if(expression) statement1 else statement2 If expression is true, statement1 is executed otherwise statement2 is executed statement1 and statement2 are any C++ statements else is a reserved word

28 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 28 //Program: Weekly wages #include using namespace std; int main () { double wages, rate, hours; cout << fixed << showpoint << setprecision(2);//Line 1 cout << "Line 2: Enter working hours and rate: "; //Line 2 cin >> hours >> rate; //Line 3 if (hours > 40.0) //Line 4 wages = 40.0 * rate + 1.5 * rate * (hours - 40.0);//Line 5 else //Line 6 wages = hours * rate;//Line 7 cout << endl; //Line 8 cout << "Line 9: The wages are $" << wages << endl;//Line 9 return 0; }

29 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 29 Compound (Block of) Statement Compound statement (block of statements): { statement1; statement2;. statementn; } A compound statement is a single statement

30 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 30 Compound Statement Example if(age > 18) { cout<<" Eligible to vote."<<endl; cout<<" No longer a minor."<<endl; } else { cout<<"Not eligible to vote."<<endl; cout<<"Still a minor."<<endl; }

31 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 31 Use of blocks recommended if ( Expression ) { } else { } “if clause” “else clause”

32 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 32 What happens if you omit braces? if ( (carDoors == 4 ) && (driverAge > 24) ) premium = 650.00 ; cout << “ LOW RISK “ ; else premium = 1200.00 ; cout << “ HIGH RISK ” ; monthlyPayment = premium / 12.0 + 5.00 ; COMPILE ERROR OCCURS. The “if clause” is the single statement following the if.

33 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 33 Braces can only be omitted when each clause is a single statement if ( lastInitial <= ‘K’ ) volume = 1; else volume = 2; cout << “Look it up in volume # “ << volume << “ of NYC phone book”;

34 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 34 if ( Expression1 ) Statement1 else if ( Expression2 ) Statement2. else if ( ExpressionN ) StatementN else Statement N+1 EXACTLY 1 of these statements will be executed. Nested if Statements

35 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 35 if ( creditsEarned >= 90 ) cout << “SENIOR STATUS “; else if ( creditsEarned >= 60 ) cout << “JUNIOR STATUS “; else if ( creditsEarned >= 30 ) cout << “SOPHOMORE STATUS “; else cout << “FRESHMAN STATUS “; Multi-way Branching

36 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 36 Nested if Nesting: one control statement in another An else is associated with the most recent if (that has not been paired with an else) For example: if(score >= 90) cout<<"The grade is A"<<endl; else if (score >= 80) cout<<"The grade is B"<<endl; else cout<<"The grade is F"<<endl;

37 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 37 Bad Example has output: FAIL float average; average = 100.0; if ( average >= 60.0 ) // line 3 if ( average < 70.0 ) // line 4 cout << “Marginal PASS”; // line 5 else // line 6 cout << “FAIL”; // line 7 WHY? The compiler ignores indentation and pairs the else with the second if. An else is always paired with the closest precedence if (that doesn’t have an else paired with it.) average 100.0

38 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 38 To correct the problem, use braces float average; average = 100.0; if ( average >= 60.0 ) { if ( average < 70.0 ) cout << “Marginal PASS”; } else cout << “FAIL”; average 100.0

39 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 39 Input Failure and the if Statement If input stream enters a fail state All subsequent input statements associated with that stream are ignored Program continues to execute May produce erroneous results

40 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 40 Each I/O stream has a state (condition) An input stream enters fail state when you try to read invalid input data try to open a file which does not exist try to read beyond the end of the file l An output stream enters fail state when you try to create a file with an invalid name try to create a file on a write-protected disk try to create a file on a full disk

41 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 41 How can you tell the state? Can use if statements to check status of input stream? If stream enters the fail state, include instructions that stop program execution The stream identifier can be used as if it were a Boolean variable. It has value false (meaning the last I/O operation on that stream failed) when the stream is in fail state. When you use a file stream, you should check on its state.

42 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 42 Checking on the State ofstream myOutfile; myOutfile.open (“A:\\myOut.dat”); if ( ! myOutfile ) { cout << “File opening error. ” << “Program terminated.” << endl; return 1; } // otherwise send output to myOutfile 42

43 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 43 Conditional Operator (?:) Conditional operator (?:) takes three arguments (ternary) Syntax for using the conditional operator: expression1 ? expression2 : expression3  If expression1 is true, the result of the conditional expression is expression2.  Otherwise, the result is expression3  max = (a >=b) ? a : b;

44 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 44 expression’s value determines which statement is selected for execution

45 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 45 switch Structures Switch structure: alternate to if-else Switch expression is evaluated first Value of the expression determines which corresponding action is taken Expression is sometimes called the selector

46 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 46 switch Structures (continued) Expression value can be only integral Its value determines which statement is selected for execution A particular case value should appear only once

47 47 C++ Built-In Data Types Composite array struct union class Address pointer reference Simple IntegralFloating char short int long enum float double long double

48 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 48 switch Structures (continued) One or more statements may follow a case label Braces are not needed to turn multiple statements into a single compound statement The break statement may or may not appear after each statement switch, case, break, and default are reserved words

49 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 49 switch Statement Rules When value of the expression is matched against a case value, Statements execute until break statement is found or the end of switch structure is reached If value of the expression does not match any of the case values Statements following the default label execute If no default label and no match the entire switch statement is skipped A break statement causes an immediate exit from the switch structure

50 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 50 //Program: Effect of break statements in a switch structure #include using namespace std; int main () { int a; cout << "Enter an integer between 0 and 10: "; //Line 1 cin >> a; //Line 2 cout << "\nThe number you entered is " << a << endl; //Line 3 switch (a) //Line 4 { case 0: //Line 5 case 1: cout << "Hello "; //Line 6 case 2: cout << "there. "; //Line 7 case 3: cout << "I am "; //Line 8 case 4: cout << "Mickey." << endl; //Line 9 break; //Line 10 case 5: cout << "How "; //Line 11 case 6: //Line 12 case 7: //Line 13 case 8: cout << "are you?" << endl;//Line 14 break; //Line 15 case 9: break; //Line 16 case 10: cout << "Have a nice day." << endl;//Line 17 break; //Line 18 default: cout << "Sorry, the number is out of " << "range." << endl; //Line 19 } cout << "Out of switch structure." << endl;//Line 20 return 0; }

51 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 51 The assert Function Certain types of errors that are very difficult to catch can occur in a program For example, division by zero can be difficult to catch using any of the programming techniques examined so far The predefined function, assert, is useful in stopping program execution when certain elusive errors occur

52 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 52 The assert Function (continued) The syntax for assert: assert(expression); expression is any logical expression If expression evaluates to true,  the next statement executes If the expression evaluates to false,  the program terminates and indicates where in the program the error occurred assert (denominator); quotient = numerator / denominator; if denominator = 0, an error msg displays similar to that: Assertion failed: denominator, file c:\temp\assertfunction\assertfunction.cpp, line 20

53 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 53 The assert Function (continued) To use assert, include cassert header file Assert is useful for enforcing programming constraints during program development After developing and testing a program, remove or disable assert statements The preprocessor directive  #define NDEBUG // must be placed before the directive #include //to disable the assert statement

54 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 54 Programming Example This programming example calculates a customer’s bill for a local cable company (the solution with functions in ch6 p.289) There are two types of customers: Residential Business Two rates for calculating a cable bill: One for residential customers One for business customers

55 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 55 Rates For residential customer: 1.Bill processing fee: $4.50 2.Basic service fee: $20.50 3.Premium channel: $7.50 per channel For business customer: 1.Bill processing fee: $15.00 2.Basic service fee: $75.00 for first 10 connections and $5.00 for each additional connection 3.Premium channel cost: $50.00 per channel for any number of connections

56 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 56 Requirements Ask user for account number and customer code Assume R or r stands for residential customer and B or b stands for business customer

57 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 57 Input and Output Input: Customer account number Customer code Number of premium channels For business customers extra, number of basic service connections Output: Customer’s account number Billing amount

58 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 58 Program Analysis The purpose of the program is to calculate and print billing amount Calculating the billing amount requires: Customer for whom the billing amount is calculated (residential or business) Number of premium channels to which the customer subscribes For a business customers, you need extra: Number of basic service connections

59 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 59 Program Analysis (continued) Data needed to calculate the bill, such as bill processing fees and the cost of a premium channel, are known quantities The program should print the billing amount to two decimal places

60 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 60 Algorithm Design Set precision to two decimal places Prompt user for account number and customer type If customer type is R or r Prompt user for number of premium channels Compute and print the bill If customer type is B or b Prompt user for number of basic service connections and number of premium channels Compute and print the bill

61 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 61 Variables int accountNumber; //customer acct. num char customerType; //customer code int numberOfPremiumChannels; // number of //premium channels int numberOfBasicServiceConnections; // // number of basic service connections double amountDue; //billing amount

62 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 62 Named Constants //Named constants – residential customers const double rBillProcessingFee = 4.50; const double rBasicServiceCost = 20.50; const double rCostOfaPremiumChannel = 7.50; //Named constants – business customers const double bBillProcessingFee = 15.00; const double bBasicServiceCost = 75.00; const double bBasicConnectionCost = 5.00; const double bCostOfaPremiumChannel = 50.00;

63 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 63 Formulas Billing for residential customers: amountDue = rBillProcessingFee + rBasicServiceCost + numberOfPremiumChannels * CostOfaPremiumChannel;

64 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 64 Formulas (continued) Billing for business customers : if(numberOfBasicServiceConnections <= 10) amountDue = bBillProcessingFee + bBasicServiceCost + numberOfPremiumChannels * bCostOfaPremiumChannel; else amountDue = bBillProcessingFee + bBasicServiceCost + (numberOfBasicServiceConnections – 10) * bBasicConnectionCost + numberOfPremiumChannels * bCostOfaPremiumChannel;

65 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 65 Main Algorithm 1.Output floating-point numbers in fixed decimal with decimal point and trailing zeros Output floating-point numbers with two decimal places, set the precision to two decimal places 2.Prompt user to enter account number 3.Get customer account number 4.Prompt user to enter customer code 5.Get customer code

66 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 66 Main Algorithm (continued) 6.If the customer code is r or R, Prompt user to enter number of premium channels Get the number of premium channels Calculate the billing amount Print account number and billing amount

67 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 67 Main Algorithm (continued) 7.If customer code is b or B, Prompt user to enter number of basic service connections Get number of basic service connections Prompt user to enter number of premium channels Get number of premium channels Calculate billing amount Print account number and billing amount 8.If customer code is other than r, R, b, or B, output an error message

68 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 68 #include using namespace std; //Named constants - residential customers const double rBillProcessingFee = 4.50; const double rBasicServiceCost = 20.50; const double rCostOfaPremiumChannel = 7.50; //Named constants - business customers const double bBillProcessingFee = 15.00; const double bBasicServiceCost = 75.00; const double bBasicConnectionCost = 5.00; const double bCostOfaPremiumChannel = 50.00; int main() { //Variable declaration int accountNumber; char customerType; int numberOfPremiumChannels; int noOfBasicServiceConnections; double amountDue; cout << fixed << showpoint;//Step 1 cout << setprecision(2);//Step 1 cout << "This program computes a cable bill." << endl; cout << "Enter account number: ";//Step 2 cin >> accountNumber;//Step 3 cout << endl; cout << "Enter customer type: R or r (Residential), " << "B or b(Business): ";//Step 4 cin >> customerType;//Step 5 cout << endl;

69 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 69 switch (customerType) { case 'r': //Step 6 case 'R': cout << "Enter the number" << " of premium channels: "; //Step 6a cin >> numberOfPremiumChannels;//Step 6b cout << endl; amountDue = rBillProcessingFee + //Step 6c rBasicServiceCost + numberOfPremiumChannels * rCostOfaPremiumChannel; cout << "Account number = " << accountNumber << endl; //Step 6d cout << "Amount due = $" << amountDue << endl; // Step 6d break; case 'b': //Step 7 case 'B': cout << "Enter the number of basic " << "service connections: "; //Step 7a cin >> noOfBasicServiceConnections; //Step 7b cout << endl; cout << "Enter the number" << " of premium channels: ";//Step 7c cin >> numberOfPremiumChannels;//Step 7d cout << endl; if (noOfBasicServiceConnections <= 10)//Step 7e amountDue = bBillProcessingFee + bBasicServiceCost + numberOfPremiumChannels * bCostOfaPremiumChannel; else amountDue = bBillProcessingFee + bBasicServiceCost + (noOfBasicServiceConnections -10) * bBasicConnectionCost + numberOfPremiumChannels * bCostOfaPremiumChannel; cout << "Account number = " << accountNumber << endl; //Step 7f cout << "Amount due = $" << amountDue << endl;//Step 7f break; default: cout << "Invalid customer type." << endl; //Step 8 }//end switch return 0; }

70 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 70 Summary Control structures alter normal control flow Most common control structures are selection and repetition Relational operators: ==,, >=, != Logical expressions evaluate to 1 (true) or 0 (false) Logical operators: ! (not), && (and), || (or)

71 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 71 Summary Two selection structures: one-way selection and two-way selection The expression in an if or if...else structure is usually a logical expression No else statement in C++. Every else has a related if A sequence of statements enclosed between braces, { and }, is called a compound statement or block of statements

72 C++ Programming: Program Design Including Data Structures, Second Edition expanded by J. Goetz, 2004 72 Summary Using assignment in place of the equality operator creates a semantic error Switch structure handles multiway selection Break statement ends switch statement Use assert to terminate a program if certain conditions are not met


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