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ICS103: Programming in C 7: Arrays: Muhamed F. Mudawar

This document discusses arrays in C programming. It defines arrays as collections of data items of the same type that are referenced by the same name. Arrays must be declared with the array name, element type, and number of elements. Individual array elements are accessed using indexes starting from 0. Loops can be used to sequentially access all array elements. Array elements can also be passed as arguments to functions. The entire array is passed by passing the base address of the array.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
51 views41 pages

ICS103: Programming in C 7: Arrays: Muhamed F. Mudawar

This document discusses arrays in C programming. It defines arrays as collections of data items of the same type that are referenced by the same name. Arrays must be declared with the array name, element type, and number of elements. Individual array elements are accessed using indexes starting from 0. Loops can be used to sequentially access all array elements. Array elements can also be passed as arguments to functions. The entire array is passed by passing the base address of the array.

Uploaded by

darwinvargas2011
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ICS103: Programming in C

7: Arrays

Muhamed F. Mudawar
OUTLINE
 Declaring, Initializing, and Indexing Arrays

 Using Loops for Sequential Array Access

 Using Array Elements as Function Arguments

 Array Arguments

 Partially Filled Arrays


2
WHAT IS AN ARRAY?
 Scalar data types, such as int, store a single value
 Sometimes, we need to store a collection of values
 An array is a collection of data items, such that:
 All data values are of the same type (such as int)
 Are referenced by the same array name
 Individual cells in an array are called array elements
 An array is called a data structure
 Because it stores many data items under the same name
3
 Example: using an array to store exam scores
DECLARING ARRAYS
 To declare an array, we must declare:
 The array name
 The type of array element
 The number of array elements
 Example: double x[8];
 Associate 8 elements with array name x

4
INITIALIZING ARRAYS
 You can declare a variable without initialization
double average; /* Not initialized */
 You can also declare a variable with initialization
int sum = 0; /* Initialized to 0 */
 Similarly, you can declare arrays without initialization
double x[20]; /* Not initialized */
 You can also declare an array and initialize it
int prime[5] = {2, 3, 5, 7, 11};
 No need to specify the array size when initializing it
5
int prime[] = {2, 3, 5, 7, 11};
VISUALIZING AN ARRAY IN MEMORY
/* Array A has 6 elements */
int A[] = {9, 5, -3, 10, 27, -8};
Memory
Array A Addresses
All arrays start at index 0 0 9 342900
1 5 342904
Array Index (subscript) 2 -3 342908
Array Element 3 10 342912
4 27 342916
6
5 -8 342920
ARRAY INDEXING
double x[8];
 Each element of x stores a value of type double
 The elements are indexed starting with index 0
 An array with 8 elements is indexed from 0 to 7

 x[0] refers to 0th element (first element) of array x


 x[1] is the next element in the array, and so on
 The integer enclosed in brackets is the array index
7
 The index must range from zero to array size – 1
ARRAY INDEXING (CONT'D)
 An array index is also called a subscript
 Used to access individual array elements
 Examples of array indexing:
x[2] = 6.0; /* index 2 */
y = x[i+1]; /* index i+1 */
 Array index should be any expression of type int
 A valid index must range from 0 to array size – 1
 C compiler does not provide array bound checking
8
 It is your job to ensure that each index is valid
STATEMENTS THAT MANIPULATE ARRAY X

9
ARRAYS OF CHARACTERS
 You can declare and initialize a char array as follows:
char vowels[] = {'A','E','I','O','U'};
 You can also use a string to initialize a char array:
char string[] = "This is a string";
 It is better to use a named constant as the array size:
#define SIZE 100
. . .
char name[SIZE]; /* Not initialized */
 You can declare arrays and variables on same line:
10
char name[SIZE], answer;
NEXT . . .
 Declaring, Initializing, and Indexing Arrays

 Using Loops for Sequential Array Access

 Using Array Elements as Function Arguments

 Array Arguments

 Partially Filled Arrays


11
ARRAY INPUT AND OUTPUT
#include<stdio.h>
#define SIZE 5 /* array size */
int main(void) {
double x[SIZE];
int i;

for (i=0; i<SIZE; i++) {


printf("Enter element[%d]: ", i);
scanf("%lf", &x[i]);
}
printf("\n");
for (i=0; i<SIZE; i++)
printf("Element[%d] is %.2f\n", i, x[i]);

12
return 0;
}
COMPUTING SUM AND SUM OF SQUARES
/* We use a for loop to traverse an
* array sequentially and accumulate
* the sum and the sum of squares
*/

double sum = 0;
double sum_sqr = 0;

for (i=0; i<SIZE; i++) {


sum += x[i];
sum_sqr += x[i] * x[i];
13
}
COMPUTING STANDARD DEVIATION
 The mean is computed as: sum / SIZE

 The Standard Deviation is computed as follows:

𝑆𝐼𝑍𝐸−1

෍ 𝑥[𝑖]2
𝑖=0
𝑠𝑡𝑎𝑛𝑑𝑎𝑟𝑑 𝑑𝑒𝑣𝑖𝑎𝑡𝑖𝑜𝑛 = − 𝑚𝑒𝑎𝑛2
𝑆𝐼𝑍𝐸

14
/* Program that computes the mean and standard deviation */
#include <stdio.h>
#include <math.h>
#define SIZE 8 /* array size */

int main(void) {
double x[SIZE], mean, st_dev, sum=0, sum_sqr=0;
int i;

/* Input the data */


printf("Enter %d numbers separated by blanks\n> ", SIZE);
for(i=0; i<SIZE; i++) scanf("%lf", &x[i]);

/* Compute the sum and the sum of the squares */


for(i=0; i<SIZE; i++) {
sum += x[i];
sum_sqr += x[i] * x[i]; 15

}
/* Compute and print the mean and standard deviation */
mean = sum / SIZE ;
st_dev = sqrt(sum_sqr/SIZE - mean*mean);
printf("\nThe mean is %.2f.\n", mean);
printf("The standard deviation is %.2f.\n", st_dev);

/* Display the difference between an item and the mean */


printf("\nTable of differences ");
printf("\nBetween data values and the mean\n\n");
printf("Index Item Difference\n");
for(i=0; i<SIZE; i++)
printf("%3d %9.2f %9.2f\n", i, x[i], x[i]-mean);

return 0;
16
}
SAMPLE RUN . . .

17
NEXT . . .
 Declaring, Initializing, and Indexing Arrays

 Using Loops for Sequential Array Access

 Using Array Elements as Function Arguments

 Array Arguments

 Partially Filled Arrays


18
ARRAY ELEMENTS AS FUNCTION ARGUMENTS
 From the last example:
x[i] is used as an actual argument to printf
printf("%3d %9.2f %9.2f\n", i, x[i], x[i]-mean);

 The value of x[i] is passed to printf


 Similarly, &x[i] was an actual argument to scanf
scanf("%lf", &x[i]);

 The address &x[i] is passed to scanf


 Array elements are treated as scalar variables 19
ARRAY ELEMENTS AS FUNCTION ARGUMENTS
 Suppose that we have a function do_it defined as:
void do_it(double x, double *p1, double *p2) {
*p1 = x + 5;
*p2 = x * x;
}
 Let y be an array of double elements declared as:
double y[6]; /* not initialized */
y[0] = 3.0; /* initialize y[0] */
 We can call the function do_it as follows:

do_it(y[0], &y[1], &y[2]);


20
 It will change the values of y[1] and y[2]
do_it(y[0], &y[1], &y[2])
Data Area of Caller do_it Data Area
Array y x
y[0] 3.0 3.0
y[1] 8.0
p1
y[2] 9.0
&y[1]
y[3] ?
y[4] ? p2
&y[2]
y[5] ? 21
NEXT . . .
 Declaring, Initializing, and Indexing Arrays

 Using Loops for Sequential Array Access

 Using Array Elements as Function Arguments

 Array Arguments

 Partially Filled Arrays


22
ARRAY ARGUMENTS
 Besidespassing array elements to functions, we can
write functions that have arrays as arguments
 Such
functions can compute some or all of the array
elements
 Unlikescalar variables where we have the option of
passing either the value or address of a variable to a
function, C only passes the address of an array to a
function array argument
 An array cannot be passed by value to a function 23
EXAMPLE: FUNCTION fill_array

*/
*/
*/

*/

 list[] parameter does not specify the array size 24

 We can pass an array of any size to the function


CALLING FUNCTION fill_array
 To call fill_array, you must pass 3 arguments:
 Actual array name to fill
 Number of array elements to fill
 Value to store in array
 Examples of calling fill_array:
/* fill 5 elements of x with 1 */
fill_array(x, 5, 1);

/* fill 10 elements of y with num */


fill_array(y, 10, num); 25
fill_array(x, 5, 1);

The address of array x


is passed to list 26
AN ARRAY ARGUMENT IS A POINTER
 Equivalent declarations of function fill_array
void fill_array(int list[], int n, int val);
void fill_array(int *list, int n, int val);
The first declaration is more readable and preferable

 Equivalent calls to function fill_array


fill_array(x, 5, num);
fill_array(&x[0], 5, num);
27
The first call is more readable and preferable
ARRAYS AS INPUT ARGUMENTS
 The const keyword indicates that list[] is an input
parameter that cannot be modified by the function

/* Returns the max in an array of n elements */


/* Pre: First n elements of list are defined */
double get_max(const double list[], int n) {
int i;
double max = list[0];
for (i=1; i<n; ++i)
if (list[i] > max) max = list[i];
return max;
28
}
COMPUTE AVERAGE OF ARRAY ELEMENTS
/* Returns the average of n array elements */
/* Pre: First n elements of list are defined */
double get_average(const double list[], int n)
{
int i; The const keyword indicates
double sum = 0; that list[] is an input
for (i=0; i<n; ++i) parameter that cannot be
sum += list[i]; modified by the function
return (sum/n);
} 29
RETURNING AN ARRAY RESULT
input array result
parameters function (output parameter)

 In C, the return type of a function cannot be an array


 Thus,
to return an array as result from a function, we
can only have the array as an output parameter
 Recall
that output parameters for a function are
declared as pointers
 An array parameter is also a pointer
 Thus,an array parameter is an output parameter, 30

unless the const keyword is used


EXAMPLE: read_array
/* read n doubles from the keyboard */
/* return an array of n doubles */
void read_array (double list[], int n) {
int i;
printf("Enter %d real numbers\n", n);
printf("Separated by spaces or newlines\n");
printf("\n>");
for (i = 0; i < n; ++i)
scanf("%lf", &list[i]);
} 31
/* Program to compute max and average of an array */
#include <stdio.h>
#define SIZE 8
void read_array (double list[], int n);
double get_max (const double list[], int n);
double get_average (const double list[], int n);
int main() {
double array[SIZE];
read_array(array, SIZE);
double max = get_max(array, SIZE);
double ave = get_average(array, SIZE);
printf("\nmax = %.2f, average = %.2f\n", max, ave);
return 0; 32

}
SAMPLE RUN . . .

33
FUNCTION TO ADD TWO ARRAYS
/* Add n corresponding elements of arrays
a[] and b[], storing result in array sum[] */
void
add_arrays(const double a[], /* input array */
const double b[], /* input array */
double sum[], /* output array */
int n) /* n elements */
{
int i;
for (i=0; i<n; i++)
sum[i] = a[i] + b[i];
34
}
NEXT . . .
 Declaring, Initializing, and Indexing Arrays

 Using Loops for Sequential Array Access

 Using Array Elements as Function Arguments

 Array Arguments

 Partially Filled Arrays


35
PARTIALLY FILLED ARRAYS
 Theformat of array declaration requires that we
specify the array size at the point of declaration
 Moreover,
once we declare the array, its size cannot
be changed. The array is a fixed size data structure
 Thereare many programming situations where we
do not really know the array size before hand
 Forexample, suppose we want to read test scores
from a data file and store them into an array, we do
not know how many test scores exist in the file.
36
 So, what should be the array size?
PARTIALLY FILLED ARRAYS (CONT'D)
 One solution is to declare the array big enough so
that it can work in the worst-case scenario
 Forthe test scores data file, we can safely assume
that no section is more than 50 students
 We define the SIZE of the array to be 50
 However, in this case, the array will be partially
filled and we cannot use SIZE to process it
 Wemust keep track of the actual number of
elements in the array using another variable 37
PROGRAM TO READ AN ARRAY FROM A FILE
#include <stdio.h>
#define SIZE 50 /* maximum array size */

int read_file(const char filename[], double list[]);


void print_array(const double list[], int n);

int main() {
double array[SIZE];
int count = read_file("scores.txt", array);
printf("Count of array elements = %d\n", count);
print_array(array, count);
38
return 0;
}
int read_file(const char filename[], double list[]) {
int count = 0;
FILE *infile = fopen(filename, "r");
if (infile == NULL) { /* failed to open file */
printf("Cannot open file %s\n", filename);
return 0; /* exit function */
}
int status = fscanf(infile, "%lf", &list[count]);
while (status == 1) { /* successful read */
count++; /* count element */
if (count == SIZE) break; /* exit while */
status = fscanf(infile, "%lf", &list[count]);
}
fclose(infile);
39
return count; /* number of elements read */
}
FUNCTION TO PRINT AN ARRAY
void print_array(const double list[], int n) {
int i;

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


printf("Element[%d] = %.2f\n", i, list[i]);
}

40
SAMPLE RUN . . .

Cannot read 41

abc as double

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