Flow of Control • Unless specified otherwise, the order of statement
execution through a function is linear: one statement after another in sequence
• Some programming statements allow us to:
– decide whether or not to execute a particular statement
– execute a statement over and over, repetitively
• These decisions are based on boolean expressions (or conditions) that evaluate to true or false
• The order of statement execution is called the flow of control
Conditional Statements • A conditional statement lets us choose which statement
will be executed next
• Therefore they are sometimes called selection statements
• Conditional statements give us the power to make basic decisions
• The C conditional statements are the:
– if statement
– if-else statement
– switch statement
The if Statement • The if statement has the following syntax:
if ( condition )
statement;
if is a C
reserved word
The condition must be a
boolean expression. It must
evaluate to either true or false.
If the condition is true, the statement is executed.
If it is false, the statement is skipped.
For example:
if (hours > 70)
hours = hours + 100;
printf("Less hours, no bonus!\n");
If hours is less than or equal to 70, its value will remain unchanged and the printf() will
be executed.
If it exceeds 70, its value will be increased by 100.
if(jobCode == '1')
{
carAllowance = 100.00;
housingAllowance = 500.00;
entertainmentAllowance = 300.00;
}
printf("Not qualified for car, housing and entertainment allowances!");
The three statements enclosed in the curly braces { } will only be executed if jobCode is equal
to '1', else the printf() will be executed.
The if-else Statement • An else clause can be added to an if
statement to make an if-else statement if ( condition )
statement1;
else
statement2;
• If the condition is true, statement1 is executed;
if the condition is false, statement2 is executed
• One or the other will be executed, but not both
For example:
if(myCode == '1')
rate = 7.20;
else
rate = 12.50;
If myCode is equal to '1', the rate is 7.20 else, if myCode
is not equal to '1' the rate is 12.50.
Anil Dutt
Equal/not equal (=) is not a value comparison, but a character comparison!!!
Boolean Expressions
• A condition often uses one of C's equality operators or relational operators, which all return Boolean results:
== equal to
!= not equal to
< less than
> greater than
<= less than or equal to
>= greater than or equal to
• Note the difference between the equality operator (==) and the assignment operator (=)
Boolean Expressions in C
• C does not have a boolean data type.
• Therefore, C compares the values of variables and expressions against 0 (zero) to determine if they are true or false.
• If the value is 0 then the result is implicitly assumed to be false.
• If the value is different from 0 then the result is implicitly assumed to be true.
• C++ and Java have boolean data types.
Block Statements
• Several statements can be grouped together into a block statement delimited by braces
• A block statement can be used wherever a statement is called for in the C syntax rules
if (total > MAX)
{
printf ("Error!!\n");
errorCount++;
}
Block Statements • In an if-else statement, the if portion, or the else portion, or both, could be block statements
if (total > MAX)
{
printf("Error!!");
errorCount++;
}
else
{
printf ("Total: %d“, total);
current = total*2;
}
Nested if Statements
• The statement executed as a result of an if statement or else clause could be another if statement
• These are called nested if statements
• An else clause is matched to the last unmatched if (no matter what the indentation implies)
• Braces can be used to specify the if statement to which an else clause belongs
The if-else constructs can be nested (placed one within another) to any depth.
General forms: if-if-else and if-else-if.
The if-if-else constructs has the following form (3 level of depth example),
if(condition_1)
if(condition_2)
if(condition_3)
statement_4;
else
statement_3;
else
statement_2;
else
statement_1;
next_statement;
Anil Dutt
The switch Statement
• The switch statement provides another way to decide which statement to execute next
• The switch statement evaluates an expression, then attempts to match the result to one of several possible cases
• Each case contains a value and a list of statements
• The flow of control transfers to statement associated with the first case value that matches
The switch Statement
• Often a break statement is used as the last statement in each case's statement list
• A break statement causes control to transfer to the end of the switch statement
• If a break statement is not used, the flow of control will continue into the next case
• Sometimes this may be appropriate, but often we want to execute only the statements associated with one case
The switch Statement
switch (option)
{
case 'A':
aCount++;
break;
case 'B':
bCount++;
break;
case 'C':
cCount++;
break;
default:
otherCount++;
break;
}
• An example of a switch statement:
The switch Statement
• A switch statement can have an optional default case
• The default case has no associated value and simply uses the reserved word default
• If the default case is present, control will transfer to it if no other case value matches
• If there is no default case, and no other value matches, control falls through to the statement after the switch
The switch Statement
• The expression of a switch statement must result in an integral type, meaning an integer (byte, short, int,) or a char
• It cannot be a floating point value (float or double)
• The implicit test condition in a switch statement is equality
• You cannot perform relational checks with a switch statement
The switch Statement • The general syntax of a switch statement
is: switch ( expression )
{
case value1 :
statement-list1
case value2 :
statement-list2
case value3 :
statement-list3
case ...
}
switch
and case
are
reserved
words
If expression
matches value2,
control jumps
to here
Repetition in Programs • In most software, the statements in the program may
need to repeat for many times.
– e.g., calculate the value of n!.
– If n = 10000, it’s not elegant to write the code as 1*2*3*…*10000.
• Loop is a control structure that repeats a group of steps in a program.
– Loop body stands for the repeated statements.
• There are three C loop control statements:
– while, for, and do-while.
5-23
Flow Diagram of Loop Choice Process
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e.g., calculate the value of n!
e.g., read the content in a file
Comparison of Loop Choices (1/2)
Kind When to Use C Structure
Counting loop We know how many loop repetitions
will be needed in advance.
while, for
Sentinel-controlled
loop
Input of a list of data ended by a special
value
while, for
Endfile-controlled
loop
Input of a list of data from a data file while, for
5-25
Comparison of Loop Choices (2/2)
Kind When to Use C Structure
Input validation
loop
Repeated interactive input of a value
until a desired value is entered.
do-while
General
conditional
loop
Repeated processing of data until a
desired condition is met.
while, for
5-26
The while Statement in C
• The syntax of while statement in C:
while (loop repetition condition)
statement
• Loop repetition condition is the condition which controls the loop.
• The statement is repeated as long as the loop repetition condition is true.
• A loop is called an infinite loop if the loop repetition condition is always true.
5-27
An Example of a while Loop
5-28
Statement
Loop repetition condition
Loop control variable is the variable whose value controls loop
repetition.
In this example, count_emp is the loop control variable.
Compound Assignment Operators (1/2)
• The loop body usually consists of statements of the form: variable = variable op expression. – e.g., count_emp = count_emp + 1;
• C provides compound assignment operators which enable a more concise notation for this kind of statements.
– “variable op = expression” is the same to “variable = variable op expression.”
Compound Assignment Operators (2/2)
Simple Assignment Operators Compound Assignment
Operators
count_emp = count_emp +
1;
count_emp += 1;
time = time -1; time -= 1;
product = product *
item;
product *= item;
total = total / number; total /= number;
n = n % (x+1); n %= x+1;
5-31
The for Statement in C • The syntax of for statement in C:
for (initialization expression;
loop repetition condition;
update expression)
statement
• The initialization expression set the initial value of the loop control variable.
• The loop repetition condition test the value of the loop control variable.
• The update expression update the loop control variable.
5-32
An Example of the for Loop
5-33
Loop repetition condition
Initialization Expression
Update Expression
count_emp is set to 0 initially.
count_emp should not exceed the value of number_emp.
count_emp is increased by one after each iteration.
Increment and Decrement Operators
• The statements of increment and decrement are commonly used in the for loop.
• The increment (i.e., ++) or decrement (i.e., --) operators are the frequently used operators which take only one operand.
• The increment/decrement operators increase or decrease the value of the single operand.
– e.g., for (int i = 0; i < 100; i++){ … }
– The variable i increase one after each iteration.
5-34
Comparison of Prefix and Postfix Increments
Copyright ©2004 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All
rights reserved. 5-35
The value of the expression (that uses the ++/-- operators) depends on
the position of the operator.
The value of
j is increased
The value of
j is not
increased
Nested Loops • Nested loops consist of an outer loop with one or more
inner loops.
• e.g.,
for (i=1;i<=100;i++){
for(j=1;j<=50;j++){
…
}
}
• The above loop will run for 100*50 iterations.
5-36
Inner loop
Outer loop
The do-while Statement in C
• The syntax of do-while statement in C:
do
statement while (loop repetition condition);
• The statement is first executed.
• If the loop repetition condition is true, the statement is repeated.
• Otherwise, the loop is exited.
5-37
An Example of the do-while Loop
/* Find even number input */
do{
printf(“Enter a value: ”);
scanf(“%d”, &num);
}while (num % 2 !=0)
5-38
This loop will repeat if the user
inputs odd number.
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