Expressions and Assignment Statements

Similar documents
Chapter 7. Expressions and Assignment Statements

Chapter 7. Expressions and Assignment Statements ISBN

Chapter 7. Expressions and Assignment Statements (updated edition 11) ISBN

Expressions & Assignment Statements

Chapter 7. Expressions and Assignment Statements

Chapter 7. Expressions and Assignment Statements ISBN

Software II: Principles of Programming Languages. Why Expressions?

Chapter 7 Expressions and Assignment statements

Concepts of Programming Languages

Relational Expressions. Boolean Expressions. Boolean Expressions. ICOM 4036 Programming Languages. Boolean Expressions

CSE 452: Programming Languages. Outline of Today s Lecture. Expressions. Expressions and Control Flow

Expressions and Assignment

Chapter7 Expression and Assignment Statement. Introduction

9/21/17. Outline. Expression Evaluation and Control Flow. Arithmetic Expressions. Operators. Operators. Notation & Placement

Expression Evaluation and Control Flow. Outline

Operators. Java operators are classified into three categories:

Basic operators, Arithmetic, Relational, Bitwise, Logical, Assignment, Conditional operators. JAVA Standard Edition

Module 2 - Part 2 DATA TYPES AND EXPRESSIONS 1/15/19 CSE 1321 MODULE 2 1

Introduction. Following are the types of operators: Unary requires a single operand Binary requires two operands Ternary requires three operands

Information Science 1

C expressions. (Reek, Ch. 5) 1 CS 3090: Safety Critical Programming in C

More Programming Constructs -- Introduction

Prof. Navrati Saxena TA: Rochak Sachan

Chapter 3: Operators, Expressions and Type Conversion

CS313D: ADVANCED PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE

UNIT- 3 Introduction to C++

Operators & Expressions

Operators and Expressions

Lecture Set 4: More About Methods and More About Operators

Lecture Set 4: More About Methods and More About Operators

LECTURE 17. Expressions and Assignment

Operators in C. Staff Incharge: S.Sasirekha

The Arithmetic Operators. Unary Operators. Relational Operators. Examples of use of ++ and

The Arithmetic Operators

Operators and Expressions in C & C++ Mahesh Jangid Assistant Professor Manipal University, Jaipur

Computers Programming Course 6. Iulian Năstac

Arithmetic Operators. Portability: Printing Numbers

LECTURE 3 C++ Basics Part 2

Unit 3. Operators. School of Science and Technology INTRODUCTION

Le L c e t c ur u e e 2 To T p o i p c i s c t o o b e b e co c v o e v r e ed e Variables Operators

JAVA OPERATORS GENERAL

Sir Muhammad Naveed. Arslan Ahmed Shaad ( ) Muhammad Bilal ( )

Operators in java Operator operands.

Will introduce various operators supported by C language Identify supported operations Present some of terms characterizing operators

COMP Primitive and Class Types. Yi Hong May 14, 2015

Java Primer 1: Types, Classes and Operators

SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT 1. Operators 2018W A. Ferscha (Institute of Pervasive Computing, JKU Linz)

Operators and Expressions:

Programming Languages, Summary CSC419; Odelia Schwartz

Data Types and Variables in C language

Introduction Primitive Data Types Character String Types User-Defined Ordinal Types Array Types. Record Types. Pointer and Reference Types

Full file at

Motivation for typed languages

ESCI 386 IDL Programming for Advanced Earth Science Applications Lesson 1 IDL Operators

SECTION II: LANGUAGE BASICS

ISA 563 : Fundamentals of Systems Programming

Operators and Type Conversion. By Avani M. Sakhapara Assistant Professor, IT Dept, KJSCE

GO - OPERATORS. This tutorial will explain the arithmetic, relational, logical, bitwise, assignment and other operators one by one.

Operators. Lecture 3 COP 3014 Spring January 16, 2018

Outline. Performing Computations. Outline (cont) Expressions in C. Some Expression Formats. Types for Operands

Announcements. Lab Friday, 1-2:30 and 3-4:30 in Boot your laptop and start Forte, if you brought your laptop

Expressions. Arithmetic expressions. Logical expressions. Assignment expression. n Variables and constants linked with operators

Java enum, casts, and others (Select portions of Chapters 4 & 5)

Java provides a rich set of operators to manipulate variables. We can divide all the Java operators into the following groups:

1.3b Type Conversion

22c:111 Programming Language Concepts. Fall Types I

Informatics Ingeniería en Electrónica y Automática Industrial

CSC 1214: Object-Oriented Programming

BRANCHING if-else statements

COSC252: Programming Languages: Basic Semantics: Data Types. Jeremy Bolton, PhD Asst Teaching Professor

Unit-2 (Operators) ANAND KR.SRIVASTAVA

9/7/17. Outline. Name, Scope and Binding. Names. Introduction. Names (continued) Names (continued) In Text: Chapter 5

JAC444 - Lecture 1. Introduction to Java Programming Language Segment 4. Jordan Anastasiade Java Programming Language Course

Principles of Programming Languages. Lecture Outline

Java Notes. 10th ICSE. Saravanan Ganesh

Chapter 1. Preliminaries

G Programming Languages - Fall 2012

o Counter and sentinel controlled loops o Formatting output o Type casting o Top-down, stepwise refinement

Chapter 5 Names, Bindings, Type Checking, and Scopes

Chapter 5 Names, Binding, Type Checking and Scopes

Programming for Engineers Iteration

CS 112 Introduction to Computing II. Wayne Snyder Computer Science Department Boston University

CSE 1001 Fundamentals of Software Development 1. Identifiers, Variables, and Data Types Dr. H. Crawford Fall 2018

UNIT 3 OPERATORS. [Marks- 12]

Basics of Java Programming

CONTENTS: Compilation Data and Expressions COMP 202. More on Chapter 2

CT 229. Java Syntax 26/09/2006 CT229

Review of the C Programming Language

Introduction. Primitive Data Types: Integer. Primitive Data Types. ICOM 4036 Programming Languages

Overview (4) CPE 101 mod/reusing slides from a UW course. Assignment Statement: Review. Why Study Expressions? D-1

Chapter 7. Additional Control Structures

Programming in C++ 6. Floating point data types

Definition: Data Type A data type is a collection of values and the definition of one or more operations on those values.

Programming Languages Third Edition. Chapter 7 Basic Semantics

Arithmetic and Bitwise Operations on Binary Data

Ruby: Introduction, Basics

Chapter 4: Basic C Operators

Data Handing in Python

Information Science 1

Expressions and Precedence. Last updated 12/10/18

Transcription:

Expressions and Assignment Statements

Introduction Expressions are the fundamental means of specifying computations in a programming language To understand expression evaluation, need to be familiar with the orders of operator and operand evaluation Essence of imperative languages is dominant role of assignment statements Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.

Arithmetic Expressions Arithmetic evaluation was one of the motivations for the development of the first programming languages Arithmetic expressions consist of operators, operands, parentheses, and function calls Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-3

Arithmetic Expressions: Design Issues Design issues for arithmetic expressions Operator precedence rules? Operator associativity rules? Order of operand evaluation? Operand evaluation side effects? Operator overloading? Type mixing in expressions? Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-4

Arithmetic Expressions: Operators A unary operator has one operand A binary operator has two operands A ternary operator has three operands Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-5

Arithmetic Expressions: Operator Precedence Rules The operator precedence rules for expression evaluation define the order in which adjacent operators of different precedence levels are evaluated Typical precedence levels parentheses unary operators ** (if the language supports it) *, / +, - Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-6

Arithmetic Expressions: Operator Associativity Rule The operator associativity rules for expression evaluation define the order in which adjacent operators with the same precedence level are evaluated Typical associativity rules Left to right, except **, which is right to left Sometimes unary operators associate right to left (e.g., in FORTRAN) APL is different; all operators have equal precedence and all operators associate right to left Precedence and associativity rules can be overriden with parentheses Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-7

Associativity Examples Fortran Left: *, /, +, - Right: ** c-based Left: *, /, %, binary +, binary - Right: ++, --, unary -, unary + Ada Left: all except ** Nonassociative: ** APL Right: all

Ruby Expressions All arithmetic, relational, and assignment operators, as well as array indexing, shifts, and bit-wise logic operators, are implemented as methods One result of this is that these operators can all be overriden by application programs Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-9

Arithmetic Expressions: Conditional Expressions Conditional Expressions C-based languages (e.g., C, C++) An example: average = (count == 0)? 0 : sum / count Evaluates as if written like if (count == 0) average = 0 else average = sum /count Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-10

Arithmetic Expressions: Operand Evaluation Order Operand evaluation order 1. Variables: fetch the value from memory 2. Constants: sometimes a fetch from memory; sometimes the constant is in the machine language instruction 3. Parenthesized expressions: evaluate all operands and operators first 4. The most interesting case is when an operand is a function call Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-11

Arithmetic Expressions: Operand Evaluation Order Operand evaluation order Variables: fetch the value from memory Constants: sometimes a fetch from memory; sometimes the constant is in the machine language instruction Parenthesized expressions: evaluate all operands and operators first The most interesting case is when an operand is a function call

Arithmetic Expressions: Potentials for Side Effects Functional side effects: when a function changes a two-way parameter or a non-local variable Problem with functional side effects: When a function referenced in an expression alters another operand of the expression; e.g., for a parameter change: a = 10; /* assume that fun changes its parameter */ b = a + fun(&a); Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-13

Functional Side Effects Two possible solutions to the problem Write the language definition to disallow functional side effects No two-way parameters in functions No non-local references in functions Advantage: it works! Used by Ada Disadvantage: inflexibility of one-way parameters and lack of non-local references Write the language definition to demand that operand evaluation order be fixed Disadvantage: limits some compiler optimizations Java requires that operands appear to be evaluated in left-to-right order

Overloaded Operators Use of an operator for more than one purpose is called operator overloading Some are common (e.g., + for int and float) Some are potential trouble (e.g., * in C and C++) Loss of compiler error detection (omission of an operand should be a detectable error) Some loss of readability Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-15

Overloaded Operators C++, C#, and Ada allow userdefined overloaded operators Potential problems: Users can define nonsense operations Readability may suffer, even when the operators make sense Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-16

Type Conversions A narrowing conversion is one that converts an object to a type that cannot include all of the values of the original type e.g., float to int A widening conversion is one in which an object is converted to a type that can include at least approximations to all of the values of the original type e.g., int to float Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-17

Type Conversions: Mixed Mode A mixed-mode expression is one that has operands of different types A coercion is an implicit type conversion Disadvantage of coercions: They decrease in the type error detection ability of the compiler In most languages, all numeric types are coerced in expressions, using widening conversions In Ada, there are virtually no coercions in expressions Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-18

Explicit Type Conversions Called casting in C-based languages Examples C: (int)angle Ada: Float (Sum) Note that Ada s syntax is similar to that of function calls Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-19

Type Conversions: Errors in Expressions Causes Inherent limitations of arithmetic e.g., division by zero Limitations of computer arithmetic e.g. overflow Often ignored by the run-time system Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-20

Relational and Boolean Expressions Relational Expressions Use relational operators and operands of various types Evaluate to some Boolean representation Operator symbols used vary somewhat among languages (!=, /=, ~=,.NE., <>, #) JavaScript and PHP have two additional relational operator, === and!== Similar to their cousins, == and!=, except that they do not coerce their operands Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-21

Relational and Boolean Expressions Boolean Expressions Operands are Boolean and the result is Boolean Example operators FORTRAN 77 FORTRAN 90 C Ada.AND. and && and.or. or or.not. not! not xor Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-22

Relational and Boolean Expressions: No Boolean Type in C C89 has no Boolean type--it uses int type with 0 for false and nonzero for true One odd characteristic of C s expressions: a < b < c is a legal expression, but the result is not what you might expect: Left operator is evaluated, producing 0 or 1 The evaluation result is then compared with the third operand (i.e., c) Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-23

Relational and Boolean Expressions Precedence of all Ada operators: **, abs, not *, /, mod, rem unary -, + binary +, -, & relops, in, not in and, or, xor, and then, or else C, C++, and Java have over 40 operators and at least 15 different levels of precedence

Short Circuit Evaluation An expression in which the result is determined without evaluating all of the operands and/or operators Example: (13*a) * (b/13 1) If a is zero, there is no need to evaluate (b/13-1) Problem with non-short-circuit evaluation index = 1; while (index <= length) && (LIST[index]!= value) index++; When index=length, LIST [index] will cause an indexing problem (assuming LIST has length -1 elements) Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-25

Short Circuit Evaluation C, C++, and Java: use short-circuit evaluation for the usual Boolean operators (&& and ), but also provide bitwise Boolean operators that are not short circuit (& and ) Ada: programmer can specify either (shortcircuit is specified with and then and or else) Short-circuit evaluation exposes the potential problem of side effects in expressions e.g. (a > b) (b++ / 3) Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-26

Assignment Statements The general syntax <target_var> <assign_operator> <expression> The assignment operator = FORTRAN, BASIC, the C-based languages := ALGOLs, Pascal, Ada = can be bad when it is overloaded for the relational operator for equality (that s why the C-based languages use == as the relational operator) Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-27

Assignment Statements: Conditional Targets Conditional targets (Perl) ($flag? $total : $subtotal) = 0 Which is equivalent to if ($flag){ $total = 0 } else { $subtotal = 0 } Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-28

Assignment Statements: Compound Operators A shorthand method of specifying a commonly needed form of assignment Introduced in ALGOL; adopted by C Example: a = a + b is written as a += b Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-29

Assignment Statements: Unary Assignment Operators Unary assignment operators in C-based languages combine increment and decrement operations with assignment Examples sum = ++count (count incremented, added to sum) sum = count++ (count incremented, added to sum) count++ (count incremented) Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-30 -count++ (count incremented then negated)

Assignment as an Expression In C, C++, and Java, the assignment statement produces a result and can be used as operands An example: while ((ch = getchar())!= EOF){ } ch = getchar() is carried out; the result (assigned to ch) is used as a conditional value for the while statement Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-31

List Assignments Perl and Ruby support list assignments e.g., ($first, $second, $third) = (20, 30, 40); Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-32

Mixed-Mode Assignment Assignment statements can also be mixed-mode In Fortran, C, and C++, any numeric type value can be assigned to any numeric type variable In Java, only widening assignment coercions are done In Ada, there is no assignment coercion Copyright 2009 Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 1-33