COMP 220 Week 5 Lab Pointers and Pointer Operations
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COMP 220 Week 5 Lab Pointers and Pointer Operations
This lab will explore the use of pointers in several
ways. Pointers will be used to dynamically allocate memory for new class
objects on demand from the user, and they will be used to access class-member
functions. Pointer arithmetic will be used to access and sort class objects
according to criteria explained in the lab.
Pointers are, essentially, address variables, or
variables that hold as their value the address of other variables. In terms of
memory management, they are very powerful devices, and they more closely and
efficiently use the actual internal hardware registers of the microprocessor
that the program operates on.
Pointers also have the requirement that the pointer type
must be of the same data type as the variable, or the data that it points to or
holds the address of. The power of pointers also hints at the potential
complexity of their use, which is why this lab is focused almost entirely on
several different aspects and uses of pointers. The lab also introduces pointer
arrays and pointers to pointers.
The Resistor class created in the Week 2 lab will be used
as the class that the pointer operations will be used upon. The lab also
requires the use of accessor functions and static data members, which may need
to be added to the Resistor class definition and implementation.
Deliverables
- Submit a single Notepad file containing the source code for all the
files of the lab to the Dropbox for Week 5. Your source code should use
proper indentation and be error free. Be sure that your last name and the
lab number are part of the file name: for example, YourLastName_Lab5.txt.
Each program should include a comment section that includes, at a minimum, your name, the lab and exercise number, and a description of what the program accomplishes. - Submit a lab report (a Word document) containing the
following information to the Dropbox for Week 5.
- Include your name and the lab or lab-exercise number.
- Specification: Include a
brief description of what the program accomplishes, including its input,
key processes, and output.
- Test Plan: Include a brief description
of the method you used to confirm that your program worked properly. If
necessary, include a clearly labeled table with test cases, predicted
results, and actual results.
- Summary and Conclusions: Write a
statement summarizing your predicted and actual output, and identify and
explain any differences. For conclusions, write at least one nontrivial
paragraph that explains, in detail, either a significant problem you had
and how you solved it or, if you had no significant problems, something
you learned by doing the exercise.
- A UML diagram: This should
show all classes, class members, access specifiers, data types, and
function arguments, along with any and all class-to-class relationships.
- Answers to Lab Questions: Answer any and all lab questions included in the lab steps.
Each lab
exercise should have a separate section in the lab-report document.
Your lab grade will be based upon
- the formatting of your source code;
- the use of meaningful identifiers;
- the extent of internal documentation;
- the degree to which an exercises’ specifications are met; and
- the completeness of your lab report.
iLAB
STEPS
STEP 1: Create a
Multifile Project
Create a new multifile project using the Resistor class developed in Week 1,
and include a new main() test function.
STEP
2: Modify the Resistor-Class Definition
- Add a static data member of the class Resistor to keep track of the
number of Resistor objects that are dynamically created. This will also be
used to limit the number of objects that are dynamically created to the
maximum array size of the pointer array in the test function main().
- In the Resistor constructor, use a random-number
generator to randomly assign a nominal resistance value to the object
between 1,000 and 10,000 ohms. The resistance values are not required to
be standard resistance values.
STEP
3: Create the Test Function Main() and the Support Function
- Create an array of pointers of type Resistor.
- Use elements of the pointer array to allow the user to dynamically
allocate memory and to instantiate objects of the Resistor class.
- Use the indirect member-selection operator (pointer) in the test
routine to access function members of the Resistor class.
- Write a new, nonclass function called in function main() to sort
the pointers to the Resistor objects in order from lowest nominal
resistance value to highest, passing a pointer to the Resistor-object
pointer as the only passed data argument.
- Display the sorted Resistor objects according to the nominal
resistance value, from lowest to highest.
- Within the sorting function, use pointer arithmetic to access the
individual Resistor objects.
- Function main() should also ensure that there are no
memory leaks when the program ends
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